Dead City Radio
Dead City Radio is a musical album by Beat Generation author William S. Burroughs, released by Island Records in 1990. The CD is a collection of readings by Burroughs set to a broad range of musical compositions. It was produced by Hal Willner and Nelson Lyon, with musical accompaniment from John Cale, Donald Fagen, Lenny Pickett, Chris Stein, alternative rock band Sonic Youth, and the NBC Symphony Orchestra, among others. It was dedicated to "Keith Haring, at the Apocalypse."[1] BackgroundAlthough not Burroughs' first album—he released his first spoken word album Call Me Burroughs in the 1960s and was a fixture on the Giorno Poetry Systems collections of the 1970s and 1980s—Dead City Radio was the first release to receive wide public attention. Willner came up with the idea for the album after booking Burroughs for a December 1981 spot on Saturday Night Live, in which he read "Twilight's Last Gleaming" over a pre-recorded NBC Symphony Orchestra rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner."[2] Later, over drinks, the two bonded over their love of actress Marlene Dietrich, and Burroughs began singing the German standard "Ich bin von Kopf bis Fuß auf Liebe eingestellt" (Falling in Love Again), a song associated with the actress. Willner likened Burroughs to "true Americana," saying: "He should be right up there in front of a map or a railroad track or a flag, as you might see John Wayne or Johnny Cash."[3] The material performed by Burroughs on the album included excerpts from some of his famous works such as Naked Lunch, as well as a couple of items from his 1989 short story collection Tornado Alley. The track "Kill the Badger!" is an excerpt from Burroughs' novella The Cat Inside. A music video was created Burroughs' reading of "A Thanksgiving Prayer" (a poem from Tornado Alley); the reading (like the book from which it came) is dedicated to John Dillinger. Burroughs prefaces his reading of the short story "Where He Was Going" with a brief discussion of its inspiration and origins. The brief narrative "Brion Gysin's All-Purpose Bedtime Story" is taken from Ghost of Chance, a novella Burroughs would publish in 1991. Several tracks include Burroughs discussing elements of Christianity and The Bible in a conversational style, and one track has Burroughs reciting the Sermon on the Mount while adding editorial comment. Most of Burroughs' readings from the album were recorded at his home in Lawrence, Kansas between December 12 and 15 1988,[1] with further recordings taking place on June 24, 1989. The music was added at a later date. Burroughs' recording of "Falling in Love Again" was included as a bonus track and is the only commercially available track as of 2012 to depict the author actually singing.[citation needed] Gus Van Sant produced a video starring Burroughs to promote the album.[4] The track "Ah Pook the Destroyer" was later used as the soundtrack for the acclaimed animated short film Ah Pook Is Here. Burroughs' song "Falling in Love Again" plays over the closing credits of the film. Track listing
Personnel
References
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