From his early days on the British punk scene to his stint with
Public Image Ltd., from his world music/dance fusions with
the Invaders of the Heart to his later collaborations with
Bill Laswell and
Brian Eno,
Jah Wobble has always been willing to try anything that strikes his fancy. Maybe that explains why he chose to write music to accompany the words of William Blake, the 19th century poet/artist/mystic cited as an influence by Beat writers like Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs. But
Wobble went several steps further, creating a concept album using atmospheric textures as a backdrop for his recitations of some of Blake's greatest poems. Skip past the repetitive opening track, "Songs of Innocence," and the rest of the album is a delightfully unusual marriage of spoken word and music. "Lonely London" features former
Can drummer
Jaki Liebezeit, whose intricate grooves meet
Mark Ferda's rich atmospheric textures and
Wobble's hypnotic dub bassline to form a swirling psychedelic vision Blake would be proud of, while "Bananas" uses percussion, synths, and samples to create an ethnic-influenced sound not unlike
Dead Can Dance gone techno. The first release from
Wobble's 30 Hertz label, this album foretells intriguing future output. ~ Bret Love