Stereolab – Emperor Tomato Ketchup (Expanded Edition)
Tracklist
A1 | Metronomic Underground | ||
A2 | Cybele's Reverie | ||
A3 | Percolator | ||
B1 | Les Yper-Sound | ||
B2 | Spark Plug | ||
B3 | OLV 26 | ||
B4 | The Noise Of Carpet | ||
C1 | Tomorrow Is Already Here | ||
C2 | Emperor Tomato Ketchup | ||
C3 | Monstre Sacre | ||
D1 | Motoroller Scalatron | ||
D2 | Slow Fast Hazel | ||
D3 | Anonymous Collective | ||
Bonus Tracks | |||
E1 | Freestyle Dumpling | ||
E2 | The Noise Of Carpet (Original Mix) | ||
E3 | Old Lungs | ||
E4 | Percolator (Original Mix) | ||
F1 | Cybele's Reverie (Demo) | ||
F2 | Spark Plug (Demo) | ||
F3 | Spinal Column (Demo) | ||
F4 | Emperor Tomato Ketchup (Demo) | ||
F5 | Les Yper-Sound (Demo) | ||
F6 | Metronomic Underground (Demo) | ||
F7 | Percolator (Demo) | ||
F8 | Tomorrow Is Already Here (Demo) | ||
F9 | Brigitte (Demo) | ||
F10 | Motoroller Scalatron (Demo) | ||
F11 | Anonymous Collective (Demo) |
Companies, etc.
- Recorded At – Blackwing Studios
- Recorded At – Idful Music
- Remastered At – Calyx Mastering
- Designed At – Trouble (11)
- Published By – Domino Publishing Co. Ltd.
- Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks
- Copyright © – Warp Records
- Lacquer Cut At – Calyx Mastering
- Pressed By – Optimal Media GmbH – BJ67730
Credits
- Arranged By [String Arrangements], Electric Piano [Wurlitzer Electric Piano], Electric Organ [Vox Organ], Vibraphone [Vibes] – Sean O'Hagan (tracks: A1 to A3, B2 to B4, C3, D2)
- Engineer – Paul Tipler (tracks: A1 to A3, B2 to B4, C3, D2)
- Lacquer Cut By – TK*
- Liner Notes [Uncredited] – Tim Gane
- Management [Managed By] – Pikey*
- Mixed By – Jeff Fisher* (tracks: F1 to F11)
- Producer, Mixed By – The Groop (2) (tracks: A1 to D3)
- Remastered By – Bo* (tracks: B1, C1, C3, D3)
- Sleeve [Assitance From] – Frank (210)
- Songwriter [All Songs] – Gane* (tracks: A1 to D3)
- Strings – Sally Herbert (tracks: A1 to D3)
- Synthesizer [Various Analogue Synthesizers], Electronics [Electronic Devices], Maracas [Some Maracas], Tambourine [Tambourines] – John McEntire
- Vocals, Percussion [Supercussion], Bass, Guitar [Guitars], Electric Organ [Vox Organs, Farfisa Organs], Synthesizer [Analogue Synthesizers], Electronics [Other Electronics], Electric Piano [Electric Pianos], Tambourine [Tambourines], Vibraphone [Vibes] – Tim Gane (tracks: A1 to D3)
Notes
Inner :
Tracks A1 to A3, B2 to B4, C3, D2 recorded at Blackwing Studios London.
Tracks B1, C1, C3, D3 recorded at Idful Music Corp. Chicago. Remastered at Calyx, Berlin.
Thankyou to: Sheri Hood.
Sleeve at Trouble
Published by Domino Publishing Co. Ltd
martin@associatedlondonmanagement.com
On 24" x 24" poster:
Original sound recording made by Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks 1996
P 1996 Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks
C 2019 Warp Records
-
"Metronomic Underground" originally called "Chrome Tubby". The second track written for "Emperor Tomato Ketchup". This was the beginning of the 'arranged in the studio / studio as instrument" approach that [Stereolab] would adopt. There were no computers or samplers used in recording "Emperor Tomato Ketchup".
"Cybele's Reverie", the Noise Of Carpet"). It was released as a single in edited form.
"Percolator" [is] in 7/8 time.
"Les Yper-Sound", the first song on the LP to be recorded in Chicago. John ended up gating/shaping the guitar chords with a hi-hat pattern and then filtering it through a synthesizer.
"OLV 26", an earlier attempt at this basic electronic rifferama in early Nurse With Wound.
"The Noise Of Carpet" was indeed a kind of single in the US, albeit a promo.
"Emperor Tomato Ketchup", sped up the vocals by slowing the tape down. This was all done on the demo which normally meant the vocal melody was too high to sing. Instead of changing the key of the song to suit the vocal range [Stereolab] again slowed the tape down because [they] liked the effect of speeding up the vocals. This is a track that would have turned out totally different if [they] had recorded it in London.
"Motoroller Scalatron", another Lab song named after a keyboard instrument. This was Duncan's last record with [Stereolab]. Morgane had only learnt the organ just before ing the band and this was her first record with [them] (give or take some limited 7" or something).
"Slow Fast Hazel", demo on the Fostex cassette recorder.
"Anonymous Collective", final song on the LP and final song recorded at Idful, Chicago.
Freestyle Dumpling / Percolator (Original Mix Version)
"Freestyle Dumpling" was recorded in London for Emperor Tomato Ketchup but didn't make the LP. It was released a couple of years later as one side of a 7" single available with the Japaenese Aluminum Tunes, where it was incorrectly titled as "Freestyle Dumping". [Tim Gane] invited Ray to come down to Blackwing Studios during the early stages of recording the album to add saxophone on a number of tracks, but on the final LP Ray only appears at the very end of "Percolator". After two weeks of recording [Stereolab] had about ten tracks of just drums with bass and alto sax playing exactly the same thing laid of the top of it. Sean wrote the descending line for Wurlitzer and strings. That broke the ime and opened up all the tracks again. Ray's sax got edged out of the final mixes for the LP. "Percolator (Original Mix Version)" dates from a week or two before the final LP versions, is a bit longer and has a different arrangement, and there's a bit more of Ray's sax at the end.
"The Noise Of Carpet (Original Mix)", earlier and more abrasive version of the song which had the working title "Broken Face".
"Old Lungs", although not a previously unreleased track (it appeared on an Yo La Tengo in the UK. It built up into a frenzy when played live but didn't translate to the recording studio. [Stereolab] tried a second version ("Young Lungs"), playing it live in the studio but that also didn't make the LP.
-
Mastering notes
This series of re-issues were mastered from the original 1/2" tapes at Calyx Mastering, Berlin.
As [Stereolab] started the project it became obvious that most of the tapes were showing signs of deterioration and some of the earliest ones were already at an advanced stage of decay and were actively shredding. They would need to be baked. Baking is not done to improve the quality of the sound and can lead to some softening and loss of fine detail but the process was necessary to preserve the contents of the tape long enough to transfer the tracks. Great care was taken during the baking of the tapes.
The earliest tapes would not have been able to withstand the stress put on them by a normal tape machine set up, with its high tension mechanism and multi head configuration, plus [the] 1/2" tapes needed to run at 30 inches per second - this increased tension and would have most likely snapped the tape.
As a solution Bo decided to commission a bespoke tape block which consisted of a single playback head and a simple, no tension tape guide. This allowed the tape to be simply held in place as it ed over the single head.
-
Demos
The demos were all recorded onto a Foster X-15 4-track cassette recorder - mainly using a DI'd Fender Jaguar guitar and a microphone for Laetitia's vocals. Sometimes [Tim Gane] would use a keyboard too.
The demos were mixed onto 1/2 " tape using some analogue EQ, compression / limiting and a spring reverb.
These demos were just working material to play to the band at the rehearsals or in the studio to show the rough structure of the song. As they were not meant for public release not much care was taken in the presentation, just something to show the general idea and for [Tim Gane] and Laetitia to get the parts down on tape so [they] wouldn't forget them.
Every so often Mary would come over to the house and record a vocal or two but as the songs were normally knocked out pretty quick, and [they] didn't live that close together, Mary doesn't feature on most of the demos.
The demos from around Emperor Tomato Ketchup are still generally representative of the final recorded versions except for the tracks with Moog chords which are played on guitar here. [Stereolab] still rehearsed some of the songs before recording them but not many. On later albums the demos and the final recorded versions would take different paths and vary quite a bit more.
Throughout all the LP's recorded up to Margerine Eclipse the demos were recorded to cassette tape. The interpretations, once [Stereolab] ditched rehearsing before recording, changed enormously.
Sticker, front cover:
Expanded Edition
Remastered album plus a bonus disk of demos and alternate versions, fold out poster and DL card
Other notes:
Gatefold cover
Tracks A1 to A3, B2 to B4, C3, D2 recorded at Blackwing Studios London.
Tracks B1, C1, C3, D3 recorded at Idful Music Corp. Chicago. Remastered at Calyx, Berlin.
Thankyou to: Sheri Hood.
Sleeve at Trouble
Published by Domino Publishing Co. Ltd
martin@associatedlondonmanagement.com
On 24" x 24" poster:
Original sound recording made by Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks 1996
P 1996 Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks
C 2019 Warp Records
-
"Metronomic Underground" originally called "Chrome Tubby". The second track written for "Emperor Tomato Ketchup". This was the beginning of the 'arranged in the studio / studio as instrument" approach that [Stereolab] would adopt. There were no computers or samplers used in recording "Emperor Tomato Ketchup".
"Cybele's Reverie", the Noise Of Carpet"). It was released as a single in edited form.
"Percolator" [is] in 7/8 time.
"Les Yper-Sound", the first song on the LP to be recorded in Chicago. John ended up gating/shaping the guitar chords with a hi-hat pattern and then filtering it through a synthesizer.
"OLV 26", an earlier attempt at this basic electronic rifferama in early Nurse With Wound.
"The Noise Of Carpet" was indeed a kind of single in the US, albeit a promo.
"Emperor Tomato Ketchup", sped up the vocals by slowing the tape down. This was all done on the demo which normally meant the vocal melody was too high to sing. Instead of changing the key of the song to suit the vocal range [Stereolab] again slowed the tape down because [they] liked the effect of speeding up the vocals. This is a track that would have turned out totally different if [they] had recorded it in London.
"Motoroller Scalatron", another Lab song named after a keyboard instrument. This was Duncan's last record with [Stereolab]. Morgane had only learnt the organ just before ing the band and this was her first record with [them] (give or take some limited 7" or something).
"Slow Fast Hazel", demo on the Fostex cassette recorder.
"Anonymous Collective", final song on the LP and final song recorded at Idful, Chicago.
Freestyle Dumpling / Percolator (Original Mix Version)
"Freestyle Dumpling" was recorded in London for Emperor Tomato Ketchup but didn't make the LP. It was released a couple of years later as one side of a 7" single available with the Japaenese Aluminum Tunes, where it was incorrectly titled as "Freestyle Dumping". [Tim Gane] invited Ray to come down to Blackwing Studios during the early stages of recording the album to add saxophone on a number of tracks, but on the final LP Ray only appears at the very end of "Percolator". After two weeks of recording [Stereolab] had about ten tracks of just drums with bass and alto sax playing exactly the same thing laid of the top of it. Sean wrote the descending line for Wurlitzer and strings. That broke the ime and opened up all the tracks again. Ray's sax got edged out of the final mixes for the LP. "Percolator (Original Mix Version)" dates from a week or two before the final LP versions, is a bit longer and has a different arrangement, and there's a bit more of Ray's sax at the end.
"The Noise Of Carpet (Original Mix)", earlier and more abrasive version of the song which had the working title "Broken Face".
"Old Lungs", although not a previously unreleased track (it appeared on an Yo La Tengo in the UK. It built up into a frenzy when played live but didn't translate to the recording studio. [Stereolab] tried a second version ("Young Lungs"), playing it live in the studio but that also didn't make the LP.
-
Mastering notes
This series of re-issues were mastered from the original 1/2" tapes at Calyx Mastering, Berlin.
As [Stereolab] started the project it became obvious that most of the tapes were showing signs of deterioration and some of the earliest ones were already at an advanced stage of decay and were actively shredding. They would need to be baked. Baking is not done to improve the quality of the sound and can lead to some softening and loss of fine detail but the process was necessary to preserve the contents of the tape long enough to transfer the tracks. Great care was taken during the baking of the tapes.
The earliest tapes would not have been able to withstand the stress put on them by a normal tape machine set up, with its high tension mechanism and multi head configuration, plus [the] 1/2" tapes needed to run at 30 inches per second - this increased tension and would have most likely snapped the tape.
As a solution Bo decided to commission a bespoke tape block which consisted of a single playback head and a simple, no tension tape guide. This allowed the tape to be simply held in place as it ed over the single head.
-
Demos
The demos were all recorded onto a Foster X-15 4-track cassette recorder - mainly using a DI'd Fender Jaguar guitar and a microphone for Laetitia's vocals. Sometimes [Tim Gane] would use a keyboard too.
The demos were mixed onto 1/2 " tape using some analogue EQ, compression / limiting and a spring reverb.
These demos were just working material to play to the band at the rehearsals or in the studio to show the rough structure of the song. As they were not meant for public release not much care was taken in the presentation, just something to show the general idea and for [Tim Gane] and Laetitia to get the parts down on tape so [they] wouldn't forget them.
Every so often Mary would come over to the house and record a vocal or two but as the songs were normally knocked out pretty quick, and [they] didn't live that close together, Mary doesn't feature on most of the demos.
The demos from around Emperor Tomato Ketchup are still generally representative of the final recorded versions except for the tracks with Moog chords which are played on guitar here. [Stereolab] still rehearsed some of the songs before recording them but not many. On later albums the demos and the final recorded versions would take different paths and vary quite a bit more.
Throughout all the LP's recorded up to Margerine Eclipse the demos were recorded to cassette tape. The interpretations, once [Stereolab] ditched rehearsing before recording, changed enormously.
Sticker, front cover:
Expanded Edition
Remastered album plus a bonus disk of demos and alternate versions, fold out poster and DL card
Other notes:
Gatefold cover
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Barcode (Sticker, back cover): 5060384616070
- Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 1): D-UHF-D11R A TK.BO Calyx'19 BJ67730-01 A1
- Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 1): D-UHF-D11R B TK.BO BJ67730-01 B1
- Matrix / Runout (Side C, variant 1): D-UHF-D11R C T K.BO Calyx'19 9+ BJ67730-02 C1
- Matrix / Runout (Side D, variant 1): D-UHF-D11R D TK.BO BJ67730-02 D1 V+
- Matrix / Runout (Side E, variant 1): D-UHF-D11R E TK.BO Calyx'19 BJ67730-03 E1 VT
- Matrix / Runout (Side F, variant 1): D-UHF-D11R F TK.BO BJ67730-03 F1
- Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 2): BJ67730-01 A1 D-UHF-D11R A TK∙Bo Calyx'19
- Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 2): T BJ67730-01 B1 D-UHF-D11R B TK∙Bo
- Matrix / Runout (Side C, variant 2): BJ67730-02 C1 D-UHF-D11R C TK∙Bo Calyx'19 51
- Matrix / Runout (Side D, variant 2): BJ67730-02 D1 D-UHF-D11R D TK∙Bo VI
- Matrix / Runout (Side E, variant 2): BJ67730-03 E1 VF D-UHF-D11R E TK∙Bo Calyx'19
- Matrix / Runout (Side F, variant 2): BJ67730-03 F1 9F D-UHF-D11R F TK∙BO
Other Versions (5 of 44)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Recently Edited
|
Emperor Tomato Ketchup (CD, Album, SRC/ARC) | Elektra | 61840-2 | US | 1996 | ||
Recently Edited
|
Emperor Tomato Ketchup (2×LP, Album, Limited Edition, Yellow Translucent With Silver Glitter ) | Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks | D-UHF-D11 | UK | 1996 | ||
Recently Edited
|
Emperor Tomato Ketchup (CD, Album) | Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks | D-UHF-CD11 | UK | 1996 | ||
Emperor Tomato Ketchup (LP, Album) | Elektra | 61840-1 | US | 1996 | |||
Recently Edited
|
Emperor Tomato Ketchup (CD, Album, Club Edition) | Elektra | 61840-2 | US | 1996 |
Recommendations
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2019 UK, Europe & USLP, Album, Reissue, Remastered
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2019 UK & EuropeLP, Album, Reissue, Remastered
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2019 EuropeLP, Album, Reissue, Remastered
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Reviews
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I also got a wobbly side 1 with my 3LP. It's especially disappointing, since all the other sides sound fantastic. But side 1 makes me seasick. You can see the tone arm surfing back and forth from across the room.
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I don't know what everyone here is raving about. Side 1 is defective. I even got a replacement copy of the record, and it has the same issue. Lots of static during the first track. Stay away from this one.
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I’ve never been disappointed by Stereolab when it comes to their vinyl pressings, and this applies here as well!
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Picked this up at the merch table. Flat, silent surface. Great overall feel and centred dead on. Only gripe would be that all 6 sides feature inner groove sibilance on the more prominent vocals. This is especially noticeable on the double tracked stuff. Still not enough to diminish the general joy of these 2019 beauties.
I had the OG limited edition yellow glitter copy of this and it sounded great at the time, but this is incredible enough not to miss it so badly! I also recommend the clear expanded Transient Random ... And the black expanded Dots and Loops and Mars Audiac Quintet. All fantastic. -
Ditto, I have 3 of these Stereolab reissues and they are amazingly well done. They really do live up to the hype. Thinking about upgrading my copy of Dots and Loops next.
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Bought this on a whim, and already this is easily one of the best recent new pressings I have. It’s dead silent, and the music sounds superb. A MUST
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Such a great album from the nineties and they did this so right. 4 albums, nice protector, and great sound quality. Plus the incredible songs. Under $30 for a lot of music.
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Aside from the typical one- or two-second track length discrepancies that are common to various reissues, the following tracks differ by more than 10 seconds from the original 1996 CD lengths vs. the 2019 code lengths, and none end with excess silence:
Percolator: 3:47 (1996) -- 4:15 (2019)
Les Yper-Sound: 4:05 (1996) -- 4:18 (2019)
Slow Fast Hazel: 3:53 (1996) -- 4:07 (2019)
Release
See all versions
Data Correct
Data Correct
For sale on Discogs
Sell a copy
40 copies from €27.72