Born in Flames (single)
Born in Flames / The Sword of God | |
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Single by The Red Crayola | |
Released | July 25, 1980 |
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Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Born in Flames" | |
2. | "The Sword of God" |
Background
Rough Trade press release
"Born in Flames" is the title of a film made in the U.S.S.R. in 1929, Director Vladimir Korsh, Screenplay by Anatoly Volny. The film concerns the fight of the Red Army against the nationalists and the Germans during the civil war in Russia.
This song is programme music for a new film by Lizzie Borden about the enthusiastic amateurs of social change.
"The Sword of God" is about the nature of Logic..."In a Muslim story, a fallen champion saw a Crusader wielding against him a magic invincible sword bearing the name of God:
'Sword', he cried, 'Can you strike a true believer? Do you not know the name on your blade?'
'I know nothing but to strike straight', the sword replied.
'Strike then, in the name of God.'"
Peter Geach, "God And The Soul", London 1969, p. 85.
Cover art
Image gallery
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Rough Trade press release for Born in Flames
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Poster for the 1920s Soviet film Born in Flames
Retrospectives
Lora Logic, 2023[1]
Just another Red Crayola day…
In true Mayo style, I was handed a lyric sheet 5 minutes before the bulbous red recording booth light went on!
Alone in the dark booth, confronted with strange, unusual words like “reptilian joint stock companies” and “set the vast conglomerates aflame”, I felt some comfort upon hearing Gina Birch’s deep pumping bass and Epic Soundtrack’s crisp, determined drum kit
When I landed on the runway about 4 minutes later, Geoff Travis greeted me through the mixing room window with a grinning smile
I’ll never know how this unexpected ditty, with it’s higher than helium notes was navigated
RIP Epic Soundtracks
Reviews
Smash Hits
August 21, 1980[2]
This is 1980 lads, and time you grew up. Red Crayola are/is Mayo Thompson, a clever, witty American plus borrowed musicians who make spiky, nervously energetic left field music without being unduly arty in the process. The programme music for a film about "enthusiastic amateur of social change" (according to the press release), this takes a few plays to sink in while the brain sorts out the melody and the four creative parts--rather the usual pre-programmed arrangements--that go into making up the whole. Brain fodder father than dance music but melodic and enjoyable.
Spex
September 1980
Ge
Epic Soundtracks (Swell Maps), Gina Birch (Raincoats), Laura Logic (Essential Logic) und Mayo Thompson (Neu-Pere Ubu) gehen hier daran, ironisch Geschichte und Gegenwart der Arbeiterbewegung darzulegen. Ob dies ein Thema für 'ne "Rock"-Platte sein kann oder soll, wollen wir gerne der weiteren Folge der Diskussion "Rock als Medium politischer Ideen?" (118. Folge) überlassen. Aber die Musik (zu einem Film) ist so eine Art ausgeschlafener Jazz-Funk und vermag eigentlich nicht davon zu überzeugen, daß wir "in Flammen geboren" sind. Sängerin Laura Logic, die ich bei der Produktion von Essential Logic immer großartig fand, versucht hier leider ständig die höchsten Bereiche ihres Stimmvolumens auszuschöpfen und trägt das ganze dann mit einem dauernden Zittern in der Stimme vor - auch wenn der musikalische Fachausdruck hierfür "Timbre" lautet, geht's mir ziemlich auf die Nerven.
New West
September 22, 1980[3]
Greil Marcus
The latest word on U.K. neo-revisionist-post-punk-avant-garde: Born in Flames, a Rough Trade press release says, is the title of a 1929 Soviet film about the struggle of the Red Army during the civil war of 1918-20. It's also the title of a new single by the Red Crayola, a group of moonlighting Londoners that includes recent Pere Ubu recruit Mayo Thompson (who headed the original Red Crayola in Houston during the psychedelic sixties) on guitar, Gina Birch of the Raincoats on bass, Epic Soundtracks of the just disbanded Swell Maps on drums and the brilliant Lora Logic of Essential Logic on saxophone. Lora takes the lead vocal here, twisting lyrics that depict a fantasy of the-U.S.A.-after-the-revolution into a pattern in which a lust for abstraction battles random images of class war, capitalist iniquity, solidarity and political hedonism. With words by Art & Language, a collective of socialist artists, the song is insufferably Stalinist and naive on a lyric sheet; on record it's the most surprising 45 I've heard this summer. And there is one truly haunting couplet: "Of America's mysteries/None remain."
The Wire
June 1997[4]
Mark Sinker
Writing 17 years ago, in a magazine called New West, Greil Marcus spoke of the "most surprising 45 I've heard this summer", The Red Crayola's "Born in Flames", on Rough Trade, a song which included a couplet he couldn't help but savour — because its words shot his own life's project so unerringly in the heart: "Of America's mysteries/none remain." These words had been written by Art And Language, a schismatic far left Brit Art collective every bit as pompous as its name suggests, as hustlingly eager as every other unloved revolutionary sect in those days to gentrify punk, to purge its unpolitical waywardness even as they wrapped themselves in its chart glamour. As did we all: and anyway, so potent were the forces that punk unleashed that even bandwagoning middleclass Trots discovered cool for a month or two. [...]