The Second Annual Report

The Second Annual Report is the debut album by English industrial music group Throbbing Gristle, released in November 1977 through Industrial Records. It is a combination of live and studio recordings made from October 1976 to September 1977. The Second Annual Report is considered to be influential within electronic music, being one of the first industrial music albums.[1]

The Second Annual Report
Studio album / Live album by
ReleasedNovember 1977
Recorded18 October 1976 – 3 September 1977
GenreIndustrial
Length39:32
LabelIndustrial
Throbbing Gristle chronology
The Second Annual Report
(1977)
D.o.A: The Third and Final Report of Throbbing Gristle
(1978)

Background

The original vinyl edition went through several pressings. Industrial Records' original pressing totalled 785 copies, while Fetish Records pressed 2,000 copies followed by additional runs. Fetish would press the album twice more after the original Industrial Records master plates were destroyed. The third edition was included in the five-album Throbbing Gristle box set; the album was recut to play backwards and included a chamber orchestra on the track "After Cease to Exist". The Fetish plates were reused to cut pressings made by Mute Records and Celluloid Records, the latter of which was supposedly released without the band's permission. (At the very least, the Celluloid issue is known to have poor sound quality.)[2] Towards the very end of track 8, "Recorded at Brighton" (incorrectly listed on many re-releases as "Maggot Death - Brighton"), "Down on the Street" by The Stooges can be heard during the fade-out.

The original side 1 of the album features mostly highlight 'documentations' of four of Throbbing Gristle's circa-one-hour live recordings to date - skilfully edited down to track-sized passages by group-members Chris Carter and Peter Christopherson - augmented by only two studio recordings, "Industrial Introduction" and "Maggot Death". Side 2 consists entirely of a film soundtrack, one which (anecdotally) was conceived before the film that accompanied it. The soundtrack presented here is also significantly longer than the visual content of the film.

Interestingly, despite the original release of the album by Industrial Records (unsurprisingly) listing each of those live excerpts correctly as "Recorded at...", many of the Fetish Records re-released copies and subsequent other re-releases have listed the live passages with the title of the preceding named track in the track-list. Both live tracks between "Slug Bait" and "Maggot Death" in the running order are incorrectly also listed as "Slug Bait", with all three following "Maggot Death" incorrectly listed also as "Maggot Death". The Fetish re-releases being international releases, similar misreporting of track titles has pervaded subsequent releases of the album: even track 8, "Recorded at Brighton", which features merely a near-1-minute edit of the Brighton Polytechnic DJ berating the unappreciative audience (and the start of the Stooges record played after the performance), is mis-titled as "Maggot Death - Brighton", despite having no similarity to the actual "Maggot Death" track or song ("Maggot Death" being the fairly up-tempo studio track earlier on side 1) or direct involvement of Throbbing Gristle. Thus, tracks listed on most re-releases of the album as additional interpretations of both "Slug Bait" and "Maggot Death", were actually live-performance highlights, at the time unrelated to the tracks of those names.

Full audio footage of each of Throbbing Gristle's live performances was released in 1979 (individually or as a '24-hour' encased set) on audio cassette (only) by Industrial Records, with the performances represented by the Second Annual Report album released as catalogue numbers IRC2 (ICA), IRC5 (Brighton Poly), IRC6 (Nuffield, Southampton) and IRC7 (Rat Club, London). Helpfully, the cassette inlay cards listed all titled pieces in the order performed. Neither "Slug Bait" nor "Maggot Death" are listed on IRC5, IRC6 or IRC7, nor any others in the period concerned except IRC4 (High Wycombe) and, of course, IRC2 (ICA) that each list "Slug Bait", with both including a recognisable version of the 'song'.

That this went largely-uncorrected for decades, may reflect an interpretation of misinformation as a result of zeal for classification and 'cataloguing' that would have surely amused the members of Throbbing Gristle, although the long-standing and repeated misnomer problem was corrected in the Remastered Edition released 28 October 2011 - possibly due to the personal involvement of group-members Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti in its creation and design. Despite the correction, those incorrect title references continued to pervade the Internet a decade later.

Original LP release track details

"SIDE ONE"'
TrackTitle/info'Instrumental/vocalRecorded at
1."Industrial Introduction"instrumental(officially) studio
2."Slug Bait"vocal P-Orridgelive at ICA, London (18oct76)
3.untitledinstrumentallive at Nuffield Theatre, Southampton (07may77)
4.untitledvocal tape of young Canadian child-killer interviewlive at Brighton Polytechnic (26mar77)
5."Maggot Death"vocal P-Orridge(officially) studio
6.a)untitled, b)"£1.30" [medley*]a)instrumental, b)vocal P-Orridge, tapeslive at Rat Club, Pindar of Wakefield, London (22may77)
7.untitledinstrumental, taped voiceslive at Nuffield Theatre, Southampton (07may77)
8.untitledvocal audience, venue DJ berating audience (no TG content)live at Brighton Polytechnic (26mar77)
* Presented on the album as a single-track medley, the untitled instrumental was in fact performed towards the end of the Southampton appearance, whereas "£1.30" was performed much earlier in that same event.
"SIDE TWO"'
TrackTitle/info'Instrumental/vocalRecorded at
-'The original soundtrack of the Coum Transmissions film of "After Cease to Exist"'instrumental, taped voices(officially) studio


Despite carrying the catalogue number, "IR0002", the 12" vinyl Second Annual Report album was the first official release from Industrial Records. There was no IR0001. There was also no first annual report, although Throbbing Gristle's earlier, unofficial cassette-only 'release', "Best Of... Volume II", subsequently became nicknamed "(The) First Annual Report" by fans. Later released on cassette only (Industrial Records catalogue number IRC1), it was released many years later on other formats in the name, "The First Annual Report".

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
The Austin Chronicle[4]
Pitchfork8.6/10[1]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[5]
Spin Alternative Record Guide6/10[6]
Uncut8/10[7]

Michael Bonner of Uncut described the music as "a dystopian churn of smoke and asbestos dust" and "queerly hypnotic".[7] The Vinyl Factory's Anton Spice acknowledged the role of the album with its provocative subject matter in establishing Throbbing Gristle's reputation as a transgressive figure in underground electronic music.[8]

Thirty-Second Annual Report

In 2008, a limited-edition album titled Thirty-Second Annual Report, or The Thirty-Second Annual Report of Throbbing Gristle, was released in commemoration of the thirtieth anniversary of The Second Annual Report, as well as to mark the official re-activation of the Industrial Records label.[9] The 12" 180gm vinyl LP comprises a recording of Throbbing Gristle's live performance at La Villette in Paris on 6 June 2008, which was a reinterpretation of their original album, and is limited to 777 copies. This album is pre-framed in bespoke, high-quality white gloss acrylic with an easy access clear window for removal of the record/sleeve so that the buyer can play the album and then reseal it in the frame. Accompanying the packaged vinyl is a special "black" extended CD version, which includes extra tracks that would not fit on the LP format. There is a version of the recording available for download, but the track lengths are different from the vinyl edition.

Track listing

Side A
No.TitleLength
1."Industrial Introduction"1:03
2."Slug Bait" (Live at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London)4:18
3."Recorded at Southampton" (listed as "Slug Bait - Southampton" on re-releases)2:43
4."Recorded at Brighton" (listed as "Slug Bait - Brighton" on re-releases)1:17
5."Maggot Death" (Studio Recording)2:47
6."Recorded at Rat Club" (listed as "Maggot Death - Rat Club" on re-releases)4:32
7."Recorded at Southampton" (listed as "Maggot Death - Southampton" on re-releases)1:34
8."Recorded at Brighton" (listed as "Maggot Death - Brighton" on re-releases)0:57
Side B
No.TitleLength
1."After Cease to Exist – The Original Soundtrack of the COUM Transmissions Film"20:16
Total length:39:32

Note

  • The positions of Maggot Death and live, Rat Club are swapped on the 2011 remastered edition's first disc.
Bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
10."Zyklon B Zombie"3:52
11."United"4:04
2011 remastered edition bonus disc
No.TitleLength
10."No Two Ways" (Live at the Winchester Hat Fair 1976)4:03
11."Last Exit" (Live at Polytechnic, Brighton 1977)6:12
12."Forced Entry" (Live at Nuffield Theatre, Southampton 1977)5:01
13."Tesco Disco" (Live at Rat Club, London 1977)5:18
14."Feeling Critical" (Live at the Winchester School of Art 1977)6:29
15."National Affront" (Live at Nuffield Theatre, Southampton 1977)4:30
16."Urge to Kill" (Live at Rat Club, London 1977)7:25
17."Zyklon B Zombie"3:53
18."United"4:03
Total length:46:54

Personnel

According to AllMusic:

References

  1. Daniel, Drew (7 December 2011). "Throbbing Gristle: Second Annual Report / D.O.A. / 20 Jazz Funk Greats / Heathen Earth / Greatest Hits". Pitchfork. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
  2. "Throbbing Gristle Discography: LP". userpages.umbc.edu. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
  3. Simpson, Paul. "The Second Annual Report of Throbbing Gristle – Throbbing Gristle". AllMusic. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  4. Winkie, Luke (10 February 2012). "Throbbing Gristle: The Second Annual Report (Industrial Records LTD) / D.o.A. The Third and Final Report (Industrial Records LTD) / 20 Jazz Funk Greats (Industrial Records LTD) / Heathen Earth (Industrial Records LTD) / Greatest Hits (Industrial Records LTD)". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  5. Malley, David (2004). "Throbbing Gristle". In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. p. 814. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8.
  6. Strauss, Neil (1995). "Throbbing Gristle". In Weisbard, Eric; Marks, Craig (eds.). Spin Alternative Record Guide. Vintage Books. pp. 408–10. ISBN 0-679-75574-8.
  7. Bonner, Michael (14 February 2012). "Throbbing Gristle: the industrial pioneers, reissued". Uncut. Archived from the original on 6 June 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
  8. Soulsby, Nick (15 May 2015). "The industrial evolution: Throbbing Gristle in 10 essential records". The Vinyl Factory. Retrieved 10 June 2017.
  9. "Throbbing Gristle – The Thirty-Second Annual Report of Throbbing Gristle – Industrial Records Store". Greedbag. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
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