Shag Tobacco (1995)

In 1995, Gavin Friday released Shag Tobacco—one of the most startling and inspired albums of the decade. Created with Maurice Seezer and producer Tim Simenon, it’s a 21st-century noir cabaret where the spirits of Leonard Cohen, Marc Bolan, Jacques Brel, and Scott Walker collide. Think Weimar Berlin decadence filtered through a futuristic Las Vegas.

Label

Island Records/Polygram

Released

August 7, 1995

Length

55:18

Producer

Tim Simenon

Streaming platforms

Tracklist

1. Shag Tobacco
4:33
2. Caruso
5:41
3. Angel
6:03
4. Little Black Dress
4:29
5. The Slider
3:16
6. Dolls
4:10
7. Mr Pussy
3:40
8. You Me and World War Three
4:39
9. Kitchen Sink Drama
5:57
10. My Twentieth Century
5:08
11. The Last Song I'll Ever Sing
3:48
12. Le Roi D'Amour
3:53

Liner Notes & Credits

"I believe in songs having a meaning. In the power of words. I believe that making a record is like entering into a new world which lasts for as long as the music does."
— Gavin Friday

Gavin Friday is one of the most charismatic, original, and maverick talents to emerge from Dublin’s lair of wit and wisdom. Since co-founding the Virgin Prunes in 1978, he has challenged norms with confrontational live performances that caused riots in his hometown. The band’s seven notorious years were spent pushing the imagination of their audience. Increasingly audacious shows and a unique blend of humour made Virgin Prunes albums like Heresy and ...If I Die, I Die exceptional and ground-breaking.

After the band dissolved in 1985, Gavin began a series of collaborations with artists such as The Fall, Coil, David Bell, and Maria McKee, before stepping back from the microphone to pursue his visual art. His first exhibition, I Didn’t Come Up the Liffey in a Bubble, debuted in 1987.

By 1988, he had launched the Blue Jaysus cabaret/vaudeville club in Dublin. Meeting Maurice Seezer reignited his musical drive. Together they created the critically acclaimed albums Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves and Adam and Eve, toured Europe and America, and composed scores for Robert Altman’s Short Cuts and Jim Sheridan’s In the Name of the Father.

In 1995, Gavin Friday released Shag Tobacco—one of the most startling and inspired albums of the decade. Created with Maurice Seezer and producer Tim Simenon, it’s a 21st-century noir cabaret where the spirits of Leonard Cohen, Marc Bolan, Jacques Brel, and Scott Walker collide. Think Weimar Berlin decadence filtered through a futuristic Las Vegas.

The album's cast of characters includes Mr. Pussy, a glamorous drag queen hostess; the “Dolls” of New York nightlife; and the glittering, androgynous “The Slider,” resurrected from the T. Rex catalogue. They mingle with suburban housewives from hell and the doomed lovers of the title track.

"As we come to the end of the century, everything’s going ballistic," says Friday. "A lot of stuff is being dragged out from under the carpet. When I worked on this album, I became obsessed with the Twenties, Thirties, and Forties—the between-the-wars era when decadence was always laced with darkness. I tried to transport that into the Nineties. It was one of those 3 a.m., out-of-your-head moments in a café, drinking coffee and thinking, 'I'm not really in Dublin at all — I’m in Berlin in the Thirties.'"

"It’s a very sexual album," he adds. "From the monogamy of Shag Tobacco, to the transsexuality of Dolls, to the camp of Mr. Pussy. If there’s a place for this album, it’s where love is most definitely the drug, and everyone’s a junkie."

Press & Reviews

NME (August 19, 1995)

…the best work that Friday has put down on record for years; while some of it harks nostalgically to early-’80s electronic cabaret…the album…fits in with such ’90s defining sounds as Portishead or Tricky. Friday creates a more ominous vibe, part `Cabaret’, part Cabaret Voltaire…

Melody Maker (September 2, 1995)

…he effortlessly straddles the line between barfly poet and 21st century Las Vegas headliner….SHAG TOBACCO is a night out on the tiles that takes in pre-war Berlin, Lou Reed’s dazzling transvestite New York, Marc Bolan’s epochal `The Slider’ and Dublin’s late night transients…

Q Magazine (January 11, 1996)

…a remarkable piece of work. At least three or four tracks–the sublime, drifting dreamscape of `Angel,’ for instance–could have made Friday a household name….perhaps his over-reliance on…theatrical flourishes…has prevented him being taken to the contemporary breast…

Andy Gill

The Independent (August 11, 1995)

The range of music is certainly impressive, but it’s Friday’s lyrical apprehension of himself that comes across most strongly. In “Caruso”, he uses a scattershot series of cultural references to illustrate the song’s contention that “I’m not myself today”: this is a life lived through vicarious images, populated by fictions and infatuations which, he subsequently realises (in “My 20th Century”), have betrayed him, most notably the great myths of rock’n’roll. Despite this realisation, he opts to continue on his chosen route: clearly, destiny cannot be denied.

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