Apple Venus Volume 1

{{good article}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}

{{Use British English|date=August 2012}}

{{Infobox album

| name = Apple Venus Volume 1

| type = studio

| artist = XTC

| cover = Apple Venus.jpg

| alt =

| caption = Vinyl sleeve art; CD cover features the same illustration rotated left by 90 degrees

| released = {{start date|1999|2|17|df=yes}}

| recorded = January–August 1998

| studio =

| genre = {{hlist|Pop|symphonic pop{{cite news|last1=Guarino|first1=Mark|title=Apple Venus Vol 1|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/AppleVenusV1.html|work=Chicago Daily Herald|date=31 December 1999}}|orchestral pop{{cite magazine|title=Apple Venus Volume 1|magazine=Uncut|date=January 2000|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/AppleVenusV1.html#u0001}}|{{nowrap|alternative pop{{cite news|last1=Pachter|first1=Richard|title=XTC finds an alternative|url=http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1999-03-02/lifestyle/9903010430_1_lynyrd-skynyrd-oleander-ann-wilson|work=Sun-Sentinel|date=2 March 1999|access-date=18 March 2017|archive-date=19 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170319022437/http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1999-03-02/lifestyle/9903010430_1_lynyrd-skynyrd-oleander-ann-wilson|url-status=dead}}}} }}

| length = 50:09

| label = {{hlist|Idea|Cooking Vinyl}}

| producer = {{hlist|Haydn Bendall|Nick Davis}}

| prev_title = Nonsuch

| prev_year = 1992

| next_title = Wasp Star (Apple Venus Volume 2)

| next_year = 2000

| misc = {{Singles

| name = Apple Venus Volume 1

| type = studio

| single1 = Easter Theatre

| single1date = 2 April 1999

| single2 = I'd Like That

| single2date = 14 June 1999

}}

}}

Apple Venus Volume 1 is the thirteenth studio album by the English rock band XTC, released on February 17, 1999. It was the first on the band's own Idea Records label, distributed through Cooking Vinyl in the United Kingdom and TVT Records in the United States. The album relies heavily on strings, acoustic guitars and keyboards, expanding upon the more orchestral approach developed on the group's previous LP Nonsuch (1992), whilst its lyrics reflect themes of paganism, middle age, romance and rebirth. Apple Venus Volume 1 was met with critical acclaim and moderate commercial success, peaking at number 42 on the UK Albums Chart and number 106 on the Billboard 200 in the US.

Bandleader Andy Partridge, who wrote most of Apple Venus, characterised it as "orchustic" (a portmanteau of "orchestral" and "acoustic"). He meant for the album title to refer to "a beautiful woman". The album effectively marked a comeback for XTC, who spent half the decade on strike against their former label Virgin Records. Apple Venus was originally planned as a double album, but because the group did not have enough money to record all the material they had stockpiled, they elected to split the more rock-oriented songs as "volume two" (released one year later as Wasp Star).

The making of Volume 1 was fraught with personal conflicts, budgetary concerns and numerous false starts. Most of the orchestral portions were rush-recorded in one day with a 40-piece symphony at Abbey Road Studios, and had to be edited over a months-spanning period. It was the group's last album with guitarist and keyboardist Dave Gregory, who departed during the sessions due to frustrations with Partridge. By the time of its release, Partridge no longer viewed XTC as a band, and preferred it to be known as a "brand" covering his and Colin Moulding's music.

In late 1999, XTC released Homespun, a version of Apple Venus consisting of its demos. This was followed in 2002 with Instruvenus, containing the album's backing tracks. In 2003, Mojo ranked Apple Venus at number 47 in its list of the "Top 50 Eccentric Albums".{{cite magazine|url=http://www.muzieklijstjes.nl/Mojotop50eccentricalbums.htm|title=Top 50 Eccentric Albums|magazine=Mojo|date=February 2003}} The album was included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.{{cite book|author1=Robert Dimery|author2=Michael Lydon|title=1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die: Revised and Updated Edition|date=7 February 2006|publisher=Universe|isbn=0-7893-1371-5}}

Background

XTC's previous album, Nonsuch, was received with critical acclaim when released in April 1992.{{cite magazine|last1=Swenson|first1=Kyle|title=Orchestral XTC|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/GuitarPlayer199904.html|date=April 1999|magazine=Guitar Player}}{{cite web|last1=Reed|first1=Nick|title=25 Years On: XTC's Oranges & Lemons Revisited|url=http://thequietus.com/articles/14404-xtc-oranges-and-lemons|website=The Quietus|access-date=25 September 2017|date=11 February 2014}} The song "Wrapped in Grey" was intended as the third single from the album, but was immediately withdrawn by their label Virgin Records.{{cite web|last1=O'Brien|first1=Karen|title=Quintessential Englishman Andy Partridge, front man of Eighties band, XTC, talks to Karen O'Brien about rebirth, recording contracts and the value of hindsight|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/interview-andy-partridge-andys-plans-work-out-but-theres-no-room-for-nigel-1196333.html|website=The Independent|access-date=25 September 2017|date=5 September 1998}} This left bandleader Andy Partridge particularly dismayed with the label.{{cite web|last=Ingham|first=Chris|title=XTC – 'Til Death Do Us Part|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/MOJO199903.html|website=Mojo|date=March 1999}} In 1993, he conceived the band's next project to be an album of bubblegum pop songs; the LP would have disguised itself as a retrospective compilation featuring 12 different groups from the early 1970s. The lyrics were heavily sexual, with song titles such as "Lolly (Suck It and See)" and "Visit to the Doctor". Partridge recalled playing some demos for Virgin agents, who rejected the project; he compared their reaction to the "Springtime for Hitler" scene from Mel Brooks' film The Producers.

Virgin also denied Partridge's requests to renegotiate or revoke XTC's contract. A&R representative Paul Kinder said: "What XTC wanted and what Virgin were prepared to do were poles apart. The contract was so old it got to the point where Andy wanted the moon and Virgin weren't prepared to give it him." Whatever new music the band recorded would have been automatically owned by Virgin, and so the group went on strike, refusing to record new material.{{cite news|last1=Dominic|first1=Serene|title=XTC: Stupidly Happy Ever After|url=http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/music/xtc-stupidly-happy-ever-after-6417095|work=Phoenix New Times|date=11 May 2000}} Partridge was also beset by health issues and in the process of divorcing his first wife at the time.

In 1997 (also reported as in late 1994),{{cite web |last1=Bookman |first1=Dave |date=15 December 1994 |title=Virgins No More |url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/Misc1994.html#ew941215 |website=eye WEEKLY |quote=After a 17-year association, pop perfectionists XTC have ended their relationship with Virgin Records.}} the band found themselves freed from financial debt and Virgin after "making some heavy concessions"; Partridge fantasied that the label had taken pity on the band for giving them a "rotten deal". He expressed distaste with the word "comeback" to describe Apple Venus, telling an interviewer in 1998: "We never went away! We just weren't legally allowed to work. Comebacks always have such glittery-suit, Fablon, working-men's clubs connotations."

Composition and lyrics

By 1997, Partridge and bassist Colin Moulding had amassed over 40 new songs, most of which were written by the former. The 11 that were ultimately selected for Apple Venus Volume 1 were written between 1992 and 1994.{{cite magazine|title=XTC: Take Another Bite...|magazine=Lexicon|date=1999|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/Lexicon199911.html|issue=11}} Partridge's offerings were an elaboration on the orchestral style he had developed on the Nonsuch tracks "Omnibus", "Wrapped in Grey" and "Rook".{{cite journal|title=XTatiCally Yours|journal=Record Buyer|date=April 2002|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/RecordBuyer200204.html}} When Nonsuch was completed, Partridge purchased an E-mu Proteus, and felt inspired by its samples, even though he was not a proficient keyboard player. His writing process changed in that, for some cases, the arrangement was completed before the actual composition.{{cite magazine|last1=Randall|first1=Mac|title=XTC: The Masters Return|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/Launch199903.html|magazine=Launch|date=4 March 1999}} The songs changed little from how they were conceived on their early demo tapes when recorded in a professional studio.{{cite web|last1=Cater|first1=Evan|title=Homespun|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/homespun-mw0002255587|website=AllMusic}}{{cite web|last1=Richardson|first1=Mark|title=Homespun|url=https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/8832-homespun/|website=Pitchfork|date=7 December 1999}}

{{Listen

|pos=right

|filename=River of Orchids XTC.ogg

|title="River of Orchids"

|description= Opening track "River of Orchids". Partridge: "That started as a wonderful little loop I came up with. ... [I wrote three] very simple nursery rhythm-type melodies, and wrestled them to the ground, made them fit each other. Then we got a 40-piece orchestra at Abbey Road to play it through."

}}

Most of the lyrical content of Apple Venus is centred on pagan themes, including the songs "River of Orchids", "Easter Theatre", "Greenman" and "Harvest Festival". Partridge thought the new material was "some of the best stuff, if not the best stuff" that he had ever written, calling it "more intensely passionate than before." In particular, he viewed "Easter Theatre" as one of the few "perfect songs" of his career, feeling that he had "exorcized a lot of those kind of Lennon-and-McCartney, Bacharach-and-David, Brian Wilson type ghosts out of my system by doing all that."{{cite web|last1=Bernhardt|first1=Todd|title=Andy answers fans' questions about guitar playing and players – Part I|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/XTCFans20100627.html|website=Chalkhills|date=27 June 2010}} "Greenman" was inspired by Green Man sculptures and pagan-derived nursery rhymes he saw Martin Carthy perform on a children's television program. He denied that the song was supposed to be Middle Eastern-sounding.{{cite web |last1=Bernhardt |first1=Todd |last2=Partridge |first2=Andy |title=Andy discusses "Greenman" |url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/XTCFans20070805.html |website=Chalkhills}} "Harvest Festival" is Partridge's reflection on school harvest festivals from his youth.{{cite web |last1=Bernhardt |first1=Todd |last2=Partridge |first2=Andy |author-link2=Andy Partridge |title=Andy discusses "Harvest Festival" |url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/XTCFans20061112.html |website=Chalkhills |date=12 November 2006}} In an interview with New Sounds, Partridge confirmed that it was him, not Gregory, who played the guitar solo on "Easter Theatre": "I was determined not to tremolo like he would have done."New Sounds (Issue 2), September 2020

Even though the record's instrumental palette relies largely on orchestral strings, acoustic guitars and keyboards, there are a few exceptions where electric instrumentation can be heard. Additional textures are provided by brass, violins, woodwinds and only a few instances of percussion. Moulding felt that "something a bit different" was appropriate for the band at this juncture, and shared Partridge's desire for a cohesive LP similar to soundtracks such as My Fair Lady and "stuff that Burt Bacharach wrote for various [films]".{{cite web|last1=Tobin|first1=Alex|title=XTC Interview with Colin Moulding|url=http://www.kindamuzik.net/achtergrond/xtc/xtc/496/|website=Kinda Muzik|date=29 May 2000}} The only songs of Moulding's that were included were "Fruit Nut" and "Frivolous Tonight", which ended up as the album's most uptempo tracks. According to Moulding, "Frivolous Tonight" was harmonically inspired by the Beach Boys and had a melody similar to "the theme song from Steptoe and Son...I smashed them together, and it worked out very well."

"Your Dictionary" was Partridge's reaction to the dissolution of his marriage. He initially did not want to include it on the album, but was persuaded by acquaintances who enjoyed the song. The same was true of "I Can't Own Her", which Partridge thought was "a little square, and a little wet". He credited "the core of the song" to the album's orchestral arranger Mike Batt.{{cite web |last1=Bernhardt |first1=Todd |last2=Partridge |first2=Andy |title=Andy discusses "I Can't Own Her" |url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/XTCFans20100131.html |website=Chalkhills |date=1 February 2010}} "I'd Like That" was inspired by a rekindled relationship with Erica Wexler, an American woman he met in the 1980s and would later marry. The music for the closing track "The Last Balloon" stemmed from an aborted collaboration between Partridge and an Italian musician, whereas the title came from The Last Balloon Home, one of the working titles for Nonsuch. It features a flugelhorn solo and lyrics about "that hope for the future, for your children -- for them not to make the same fucking mistakes as you!"{{cite web |last1=Bernhardt |first1=Todd |last2=Partridge |first2=Andy |author-link2=Andy Partridge |title=Andy discusses 'The Last Balloon' |url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/XTCFans20081109.html |date=10 November 2008}}

Production

The group elected to divide the Apple Venus project into two parts: one of rock songs, and the other of "orchustic" songs augmented by a 40-piece symphony.{{cite news|last1=Jones|first1=J.R.|title=Too Much of a God Thing|url=https://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/too-much-of-a-god-thing/Content?oid=902571|work=Chicago Reader|date=12 June 2000}} "It's still a pop album," Moulding said. "It's not like 'XTC Meets the London Philharmonic.{{'}}"{{cite web|last1=Masley|first1=Ed|title=Pop Music: The state of XTC|url=http://old.post-gazette.com/magazine/19990319xtc6.asp|website=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|date=19 March 1999|access-date=17 January 2018|archive-date=18 January 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180118011343/http://old.post-gazette.com/magazine/19990319xtc6.asp|url-status=dead}} They found a label, Cooking Vinyl, and a producer, Haydn Bendall, who previously engineered the band's 1977 debut EP 3D and had experience recording orchestras. Former Tubes drummer Prairie Prince, who had played on XTC's 1986 album Skylarking, returned for the sessions. It soon became apparent that the band did not have the funds to record all the material they had.

Moulding, Bendall and guitarist Dave Gregory wanted to reduce the project to one disc, but Partridge insisted on spreading it over two LPs. It was decided that the group would release one album with the orchestral material ("volume 1") and leave the rock songs for "volume 2". Preliminary "programming sessions" were conducted at Bendall's home in late 1997. The group then commenced recording at Chris Difford's home studio in Sussex, but the sessions fell apart after two weeks. Moulding said that the group had to leave because the studio was not yet fully functioning. According to Partridge in a 2007 interview, Difford "stole" the master tapes from these sessions, forcing the band to re-record the album from scratch twice (as the second run-through was deemed unsatisfactory).{{cite journal|last1=Pierson|first1=Pat|title=Permanent Bliss: The Immutable Pleasures of XTC|journal=Filter|date=September 2007|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/Filter200709.html}}

File:Picture of the Abbey Road studios2015-1.jpg

In early 1998, the group reconvened at Chipping Norton Recording Studios and recorded backing tracks over the course of six weeks. A single orchestral session was held at Abbey Road Studios, but its recording was rushed and had to be edited over a three-month period.{{cite news|last1=Morrish|first1=John|title=Arts: The agony and the XTC|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/arts-the-agony-and-the-xtc-1071947.html|work=The Independent|date=20 February 1999}} According to Gregory, the band had no money left at this point, and the session had to be funded by a Japanese record label. John Morrish of The Independent reported that "the human string players could not match the mathematical precision of 'River of Orchids' ... Nor could the woodwinds cope with the computerised ostinato in 'Greenman' ... The orchestra became a glorified sample, cut and pasted together to achieve the 'Vaughan Williams with a hard-on' sound required." Much of this work was done in Pro Tools, with the assistance of Bendall "until he had to quit to work on other projects." The rest of the album, which mostly involved vocal, bass and acoustic guitar overdubs, was recorded in Moulding's garage.{{cite web|last1=Jackson|first1=Blair|title=XTC's Long Road to "Apple Venus"|url=https://www.mixonline.com/recording/xtcs-long-road-apple-venus-372773|website=Mixonline|date=1 March 1999}}

Gregory's departure

File:Dave Gregory BBT SSGB (cropped).jpg

In March 1998, a few weeks into the Chipping Norton sessions, Gregory abruptly quit the band. Partridge told journalists that Gregory left because he grew impatient with the recording of the orchestral material and wanted to quickly move on to the recording of the second volume of the project. He attributed Gregory's frustration to diabetic mood swings: "one minute he'd be quite jolly, the next minute he's 'this is all shit, destroy it, wipe it, it's all terrible''". Moulding was not present for an "enormous row" between Gregory and Partridge at the studio,{{cite web|author=Dave|url=http://www.blogtalkradio.com/runt/2008/12/07/Rundgren-Radio|title=Interview of Colin Moulding|website=Rundgren Radio|date=7 December 2008|access-date=9 December 2008|type=Audio|archive-date=25 February 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090225073541/http://www.blogtalkradio.com/runt/2008/12/07/Rundgren-Radio|url-status=dead}} but he corroborated that Gregory's diabetes caused "terrible mood swings, and his negativity was sometimes hard to take. But also, there really wasn't much for him to do on this record and he felt left out." Discussing the incident at Chipping Norton, Gregory said Partridge had behaved like "a cunt, frankly." Partridge said "I really blew up. I had a go at everyone but a lot of it was directed at Dave, telling him to pull his weight and get into it more. I don't think he ever forgave me."

Gregory denied that his leaving pertained to "musical differences", and said that it was more "personal problems" related to Partridge spending the entire recording budget on the Abbey Road session. Another source of frustration was his keyboard playing; he did not feel that he had the skill that was demanded from Partridge and Bendall, "and the end result wasn't justifying the means."{{cite web|author=Dave|url=http://www.blogtalkradio.com/runt/2008/03/09/rundgren-radio|title=Interview of Dave Gregory|website=Rundgren Radio|date=9 March 2008|access-date=14 January 2008|type=Audio}} When Partridge requested Gregory to write musical charts for the 40-piece orchestra, Gregory turned in a cheaper arrangement for four players, which was rejected; Gregory quoted Partridge saying "Compromise equals crap art". Once another arranger was hired, he began distancing himself from the band. Partridge remembered: "You'd be doing an interview and you'd say the band's doing so-and-so, and he'd interrupt and say, 'Band? It's not a bloody band, it's two people making solo albums and a guitarist ... Anyway, carry on.'" Gregory also refused to sign an American distribution contract with TVT Records. He had telephoned artists who worked for the label and got "the worst possible reaction ... 'You will not be paid,' those were the four words I remember."{{cite web |author=Cherry Red Records|author-link=Cherry Red Records|title=Dave Gregory Story – Interview by Mark Powell – 2012 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBD8NoFYkjE | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211115/IBD8NoFYkjE| archive-date=2021-11-15 | url-status=live|via=YouTube |date=24 September 2012|time=45:15–46:30}}{{cbignore}}

Gregory told Partridge that Apple Venus was not "the album we should be making after six years," calling it "the vegetarian alternative." By the time the album was released, he maintained that "Andy's done a good job in recording the songs." Partridge also no longer viewed XTC as a band, instead preferring it to be known as a "brand" covering his and Moulding's music.

Title and packaging

File:Valladolid Campo Grande pavo real detalle ni.jpg feathers similar to the one on the album cover. The image was chosen by Partridge for its evocation of female anatomy.]]

The album's title was meant to refer to "a beautiful woman". The phrase originated as a lyric on the previous XTC record, Nonsuch, specifically in Partridge's song "Then She Appeared" ("then she appeared / apple venus on a half-open shell"). This continued a trend that began with Oranges & Lemons (1989) and Nonsuch: both album titles had appeared as lyrics on a track from their respective prior albums. According to Partridge, this was at first "pure coincidence, probably a sub-conscious kind of thing. You have a certain caterpillar track of words that kind of trundle around in your head." However, it was deliberate in the case of Apple Venus.{{cite web |last1=Bernhardt |first1=Todd |last2=Partridge |first2=Andy |author-link2=Andy Partridge |title=Andy discusses "Then She Appeared" |url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/XTCFans20070930.html |website=Chalkhills |date=30 September 2007}}

Partridge's working title for the album, A History of the Middle Ages, was vetoed by his bandmates. He settled on Apple Venus after finding an illustration of a peacock feather that resembled an uvula, which evoked to him something "very vulvic and female". Written underneath the track listing on the back of the album cover is a version of the Wiccan Rede: "do what you will but harm none."{{cite AV media notes| title = Apple Venus Volume 1| others= XTC| year = 1999| type = liner| publisher = Cooking Vinyl}} Partridge thought it was a "fantastic" message; when responding to an interview question about his knowledge of Wicca, he explained: "I have a smattering of knowledge of that sort of thing, but I['m] also ... interested in the pre-Christian appreciation of the land and the spirit of things, spirits in animate things and inanimate things."{{cite web|editor-last1=Sakamoto|editor-first1=John|title=The XTC Interview|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/JAM19990305.html|website=Jam! Music|date=5 March 1999}}

in Japan, the liner notes included comments from musicians such as Tamio Okuda and Aiha Higurashi of Seagull Screaming Kiss Her Kiss Her (named after the XTC song from The Big Express).{{cite news |last1=Brasor |first1=Phillip |title=XTC colors songs with earthy palette |url=https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/1999/03/16/national/media-national/xtc-colors-songs-with-earthy-palette/#.W6W9lXtKhvw |access-date=22 September 2018 |work=The Japan Times |date=16 March 1999 |archive-date=22 September 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180922101847/https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/1999/03/16/national/media-national/xtc-colors-songs-with-earthy-palette/#.W6W9lXtKhvw |url-status=dead }}

Release

{{Album ratings

| state = plain

| rev1 = AllMusic

| rev1Score = {{Rating|4.5|5}}

| rev2 = Entertainment Weekly

| rev2Score = A−

| rev3 = The Guardian

| rev3Score = {{Rating|4|5}}

| rev4 = Los Angeles Times

| rev4Score = {{Rating|3.5|4}}

| rev5 = NME

| rev5Score = 7/10

| rev6 = Pitchfork

| rev6Score = 8.2/10

| rev7 = Q

| rev7Score = {{Rating|4|5}}

| rev8 = Rolling Stone

| rev8Score = {{Rating|3.5|5}}

| rev9 = Spin

| rev9Score = 8/10

| rev10 = The Village Voice

| rev10Score = B+

}}

Released on 2 March 1999, Apple Venus Volume 1 was met with critical acclaim and moderate sales.{{cite web|last1=Schabe|first1=Patrick|title=The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul|url=https://www.popmatters.com/the-man-who-sailed-around-his-soul-2495729988.html|website=PopMatters|date=27 October 2006}} It had minimal promotion. PopMatters{{'}} Sarah Zupko deemed the album "more than worth the wait. Andy Partridge and Colin Moulding used their time off well, lavishing extra care and attention on this set of tunes that rank among the best music they have ever produced. ... this record is a shoo-in for one of 1999’s best records".{{cite web|last1=Zupko|first1=Sarah|date=1999|title=XTC, Apple Venus Volume 1 / Transistor Blast|url=http://www.popmatters.com/review/xtc-transistor-apple/|website=PopMatters}} Scott Schinder gave the album an A− for Entertainment Weekly, writing: "The gorgeous yet vaguely unsettling arrangements are well suited to the exquisitely flawed humanism of Andy Partridge’s and Colin Moulding’s compositions, lending an appropriately uneasy edge to bittersweet tunes like 'I Can’t Own Her,' 'Greenman,' and 'The Last Balloon.'"

In comparing the album to the group's earlier work, Pitchfork{{'}}s Zach Hooker said: "Apple Venus finds them picking up pretty much where they left off. Or maybe even a little bit before they left off." Stylistically, he regarded the album as a midpoint between Oranges and Lemons and Skylarking and "a little nestegg of excellent songs". Rolling Stone{{'}}s Barry Walters wrote that the LP "packs the wit and nerve that made their rock snap but does it with brass, acoustic guitars, violins, woodwinds and minimal percussion. ... instead of evoking the Sixties, Partridge and Moulding suggest a timeless pastoral past rich with melody and subtlety." Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic noted: "Although there are similarities with the pastoral Skylarking or parts of Nonsuch, there is really no comparable record in XTC's canon, given its sustained mood, experimentalism, and glimpses of confession ... [Apple Venus] easily ranks as one of XTC's greatest works".

Conversely, Robert Christgau wrote that "Studio rats being studio rats, the lyrics aren't as deep as Andy and Colin think they are, but at least irrelevant doesn't equal obscure, humorless, or lachrymose." The Chicago Tribune{{'}}s Greg Kot warned that the album could be "perhaps too radical [of a] departure" for veteran fans.{{cite news|last1=Kot|first1=Greg|author-link=Greg Kot|title=ALBUM ALERT NEW DISCS FROM BLONDIE, SEBADOH, XTC AND OTHERS|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/AppleVenusV1.html#lat990218|work=Chicago Tribune|date=19 February 1999}} The Daily Telegraph{{'}}s Alexis Petridis commented that while it is a "minor quibble", the album's "worst excess" may be its "whimsy".{{cite news|last1=Petridis|first1=Alexis|author-link=Alexis Petridis|title=Apple Venus Volume One (Cooking Vinyl)|url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/AppleVenusV1.html|work=The Daily Telegraph|date=20 February 1999}} NME{{'}}s Jim Wirth wrote that even though Partridge and Moulding have a "nasty habit of hammering really hard on the twee pedal in moments of boredom, there's still enough of that psychedelic bumpkin magic to make this worth celebrating."

In late 1999, XTC released Homespun, a compilation of demo recordings of the album's songs. This was followed in 2002 with Instruvenus, containing the album's backing tracks. Wasp Star (Apple Venus Volume 2) was released on 23 May 2000.{{citation needed|date=July 2019}}

Track listing

{{tracklist

| headline =

| all_writing = Andy Partridge, except "Frivolous Tonight" and "Fruit Nut" by Colin Moulding.

| total_length = 50:09

| title1 = River of Orchids

| length1 = 5:53

| title2 = I'd Like That

| length2 = 3:50

| title3 = Easter Theatre

| length3 = 4:37

| title4 = Knights in Shining Karma

| length4 = 3:39

| title5 = Frivolous Tonight

| length5 = 3:10

| title6 = Greenman

| length6 = 6:17

| title7 = Your Dictionary

| length7 = 3:14

| title8 = Fruit Nut

| length8 = 3:01

| title9 = I Can't Own Her

| length9 = 5:26

| title10 = Harvest Festival

| length10 = 4:15

| title11 = The Last Balloon

| length11 = 6:40

}}

Personnel

Per liner notes.

XTC

Additional musicians

Production

  • Haydn Bendall – original production, engineering
  • Nick Davis – additional production, engineering, mixing
  • Simon Dawson – mix assistance
  • Alan Douglas – recording engineering
  • Barry Hammond – recording engineer
  • Tim Young – mastering

Charts

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"

|+ Chart performance for Apple Venus Volume 1

! scope="col"| Chart (1999)

! scope="col"| Peak
position

scope="row"| Australian Albums (ARIA){{cite Ryan|page=306}}

| 74

scope="row"|Canadian Albums (RPM){{cite web|date=11 June 2015|url=http://chalkhills.org/reelbyreal/a_AppleVenusV1.html|title=XTC Reel by Real: XTC: Apple Venus Volume 1|access-date=24 June 2021|website=Chalkhills}}

| 39

{{album chart|Oricon|141|artist=XTC|date=1999-02-17|rowheader=true|access-date=27 January 2018}}
{{album chart|UK|42|date=1999|artist=XTC|rowheader=true|access-date=14 January 2018}}
{{album chart|Billboard200|106|artist=XTC|rowheader=true|access-date=14 January 2018}}

References

{{Reflist|30em|refs=

{{cite web |url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/apple-venus-vol-1-mw0000047376 |title=Apple Venus, Vol. 1 – XTC |website=AllMusic |access-date=16 June 2011 |last=Erlewine |first=Stephen Thomas |author-link=Stephen Thomas Erlewine}}

{{cite magazine |url=http://www.ew.com/article/1999/03/05/apple-venus-volume-1 |title=Apple Venus, Volume 1 |magazine=Entertainment Weekly |date=5 March 1999 |access-date=10 September 2014 |last=Schinder |first=Simon}}

{{cite news |title=XTC: Apple Venus Volume 1 (Cooking Vinyl) |newspaper=The Guardian |date=26 February 1999 |last=Cox |first=Tom|url=https://www.theguardian.com/friday_review/story/0,,313346,00.html |access-date=14 January 2018}}

{{cite news |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1999-feb-21-ca-10041-story.html |title=XTC, 'Apple Venus Volume 1,' TVT |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date=21 February 1999 |access-date=7 March 2020 |last=Nichols |first=Natalie}}

{{cite journal |url=http://www.nme.com/reviews/reviews/19990118103134reviews.html |title=XTC – Apple Venus Volume 1 |journal=NME |date=18 February 1999 |access-date=16 June 2011 |last=Wirth |first=Jim |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19991114151949/http://www.nme.com/reviews/reviews/19990118103134reviews.html |archive-date=14 November 1999}}

{{cite web |url=http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/8835-apple-venus-volume-one/ |title=XTC: Apple Venus, Volume One |work=Pitchfork |date=23 February 1999 |access-date=16 June 2011 |last=Hooker |first=Zach}}

{{cite journal |url=http://chalkhills.org/articles/qTheMusic.html#q9903 |title=XTC: Apple Venus Volume 1 |journal=Q |issue=151 |date=April 1999 |access-date=16 June 2011 |last=Maconie |first=Stuart |author-link=Stuart Maconie |page=107 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110519070307/http://chalkhills.org/articles/qTheMusic.html |archive-date=19 May 2011 |url-status=live}}

{{cite magazine |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/artists/xtc/albums/album/222152/review/6067788/apple_venus_volume_one |title=XTC: Apple Venus Volume One |magazine=Rolling Stone |date=18 March 1999 |access-date=16 June 2011 |last=Walters |first=Barry |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090411043415/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/xtc/albums/album/222152/review/6067788/apple_venus_volume_one |archive-date=11 April 2009}}

{{cite journal |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_NXdfW9kpokC&pg=PT16 |title=Blondie: No Exit / XTC: Apple Venus Volume One |journal=Spin |volume=15 |issue=4 |date=April 1999 |access-date=16 June 2011 |last=Hunter |first=James |pages=162–64}}

{{cite news |url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cg/cgv200-00.php |title=Consumer Guide: Cleanup Time |newspaper=The Village Voice |date=7 March 2000 |access-date=16 June 2011 |last=Christgau |first=Robert |author-link=Robert Christgau}}

}}