Dandy in the Underworld

For the autobiography of the same name, see Sebastian Horsley.
Dandy in the Underworld
Studio album by T. Rex
Released 11 March 1977
Recorded May 1976 at Decibel Studios London, August 1976 MRI Studios, Los Angeles, United States; Decibel Studios, AIR Studios and Trident Studios, London, England
Genre Glam rock
Length 37:52
Label EMI
Producer Marc Bolan
T. Rex chronology
Futuristic Dragon
(1976)
Dandy in the Underworld
(1977)
You Scare Me to Death
(1981)
Singles from Dandy in the Underworld
  1. "Dandy in the Underworld"
    Released: 1977
  2. "Crimson Moon"
    Released: 1977

Dandy in the Underworld is the twelfth and final studio album by English glam rock rock act T. Rex. It was released on 11 March 1977 by record label EMI. It reached No. 26 in the UK charts, the band's highest-charting album since 1974's Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow. The title track was released as a single but failed to chart, though "I Love to Boogie" and "The Soul of My Suit" achieved chart placings in the UK.

After three commercially weak albums, Dandy in the Underworld was regarded by many T. Rex fans as a comeback for the band. However, it would prove to be the band's final album, as Marc Bolan died in a car crash in September 1977. The album was praised for the strength of the songwriting and Bolan's vocal performances.

An album of unreleased tracks and alternate versions of songs from the sessions that produced the album was released in 2006 called "Final Cuts". Most of these tracks were recorded at AIR Studios Oxford Street, with the addition of four tracks recorded at Decibel Studios in Stamford Hill in April 1977 after the release of Dandy in the Underworld . Seven of the twelve songs on "Final Cuts" were not released during Bolan's lifetime. It includes an alternate cut of the final T.Rex single 'Celebrate Summer' as well as 'Mellow Love', 'Write Me A Song', 'Hot George', 'Shy Boy'.

Background and recording

At the time of the album's release, Marc Bolan and T. Rex were on a UK tour, supported by The Damned. The album and tour were notable for marking a return to form for the band.

The sessions had started in May 1976 at Decibel Studios London, with the recording of "I Love To Boogie'", with Steve Currie (bass), Davey Lutton (drums) and Dino Dines (piano) .Later recordings took place at MRI Studios, Los Angeles, United States and continued at Decibel Studios, AIR Studios and Trident Studios in London, England.

According to engineer Jennifer Maidman (then Ian Maidman):

I worked on two tracks on this album, along with a number of other songs including a later single "Laser Love". The track "I Love to Boogie" was recorded and mixed in a single day at Decibel Studios in Stoke Newington, London N16. The studio was very small and funky; Marc liked it because it reminded him of the old Sun Studio in Memphis where a lot of early rock and roll records were made. The single was mastered from what was originally intended to be a rough mix which Marc took home. It was mixed in about fifteen minutes by myself and Marc. I just threw up the faders; there were no computers in those days, and we went "OK that'll do". We got Dino's Fender Rhodes piano to distort a bit by cranking up the input on the desk, crude but quick and effective. Try doing that on a modern digital desk! Anyway, Marc liked the mix so much that it was released just as it was, much to my surprise, but it still sounds good thirty years later. The master mix was also done at 7.5 inches per second as I recall, rather than the usual 15 ips. This was so that Marc could play it on his reel-to-reel at home that night. This, along with the fact that the multitrack was an Ampex two-inch 16-track machine rather than the 24-track which was more common by then, helps to give the track its beefy sound. The other song on the album we did at Decibel was "Universe", which was subsequently overdubbed and mixed at Air studios by Mike Stavrou, I think. These were also the last tracks that Marc did with the old rhythm section of Steve Currie and Davy Lutton before Tony Newman and Herbie Flowers came on board.

The track "Visions of Domino" was a re-recording of an unreleased song, "Funky London Childhood" with completely rewritten lyrics.

Release

Dandy in the Underworld was released on 11 March 1977. It was launched at London's leading punk rock venue The Roxy.

The title track was released as a single in a remixed and re-recorded version with the offending lyrics "Exalted companion of cocaine nights" being changed to "T. Rex nights". "Crimson Moon" was also released as a single the same year, as well as the non-album track "Celebrate Summer" in August.

Dandy in the Underworld was remastered for CD by Edsel Records in 1994 as part of their extensive T. Rex reissue campaign. A number of bonus tracks were added (see below). A companion release, entitled Prince of Players (The Alternate Dandy in the Underworld) was released in 1998 and contained alternative versions and studio rough mixes of the main album and bonus tracks. A combined album digipak was released in 2002.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
NMEfavourable
Pitchfork7.9/10[2]

Dandy in the Underworld gathered the most consistently positive reviews for any T. Rex album in five years. Having fallen from critical and commercial favour, the band had endured some fiercely hostile press, but NME, which had been amongst the most negative, noted of the album: "very listenable, well arranged [and] immaculately played."

Track listing

All tracks written by Marc Bolan. 

Side A
No. Title Length
1. "Dandy in the Underworld"   4:33
2. "Crimson Moon"   3:22
3. "Universe"   2:43
4. "I'm a Fool for You Girl"   2:16
5. "I Love to Boogie"   2:14
6. "Visions of Domino"   2:23
Side B
No. Title Length
1. "Jason B. Sad"   3:22
2. "Groove a Little"   3:24
3. "The Soul of My Suit"   2:37
4. "Hang Ups"   3:28
5. "Pain and Love"   3:41
6. "Teen Riot Structure"   3:33

Personnel

Mick O'Halloran - Tour Manager/Backline Cliff Wright - Backline/Guitar tech

References

External links

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