Tracklist

  1. Correct Pitch?
  2. No Quarter
  3. Re-Funkt
  4. I Feel A Song Coming On
  5. Jig
  6. Like Young
  7. Trad Jazz
  8. Science Of Sound Intro
  9. Science Of Sound
  10. Beguine
  11. What Is This Thing Called Funk?
  12. Rhythm Method
  13. Entrance Of the Gladiators
  14. Happy Ending
  15. Bouncy Bouncy
  16. B52
  17. Thirds
  18. Fragment...Waiting
  19. Seven
  20. Two Different Worlds
  21. Waltzing In the Clouds
  22. Aversion
  23. Playschool
  24. Oi 1234
  25. Vistas For Emotion
  26. Martial Art
  27. Blame It On the Jacksons
  28. Bland
  29. What I Like About Disco
  30. Rock the Falafel Bar
  31. Transfusion Express
  32. Let's Get Funktional

About the album

Chapter is very excited to announce a 30th anniversary reissue of Palimpsest, the one and only album by Melbourne post-punk icons Essendon Airport. Recorded in December 1981, Palimpsest is now reborn as a double disc package with a whole bonus CD of live and unreleased studio recordings spanning 1980-83.

Formed in 1978 as a minimalist duo of guitarist Robert Goodge and keyboardist David Chesworth, Essendon Airport released their landmark 7” EP Sonic Investigations Of the Trivial on Chesworth’s Innocent Records in 1979. Chapter Music reissued Sonic Investigations way back in 2002, as a CD including second single Talking To Cleopatra (with vocalist Anne Cessna) and a raft of bonus tracks.

Originally gentle and inquisitive, with beats supplied by a drum machine built from plans printed in an electronics magazine, Essendon Airport began to expand after Sonic Investigations and explore the possibilities of rhythm. First came classically-untrained drummer Paul Fletcher, and then saxophonist Ian Cox, to form the four piece lineup heard on Palimpsest. With its dryly intoned vocals, flailing polyrhythms and a postmodern fascination with appropriation and quotation, the album is an eccentric post-punk classic. The album title means “a manuscript page from which the text has been scraped off to be used again”, while the original liner notes state “all” “songs” “written” “and” “produced” “by” “Essendon Airport”. After Palimpsest, Essendon Airport added bassist Barbara Hogarth and grew to become one of inner city Melbourne’s premiere live attractions. “Creative differences”, however, saw them disband in 1983, with Cox, Goodge and Hogarth forming I’m Talking that same year with singer Kate Ceberano. The bonus Live More disc collates 18 recordings, from the duo period to the impressively muscular, previously undocumented five piece lineup.

The original 1982 vinyl version of Palimpsest was presented in a screen-printed plastic cover, and this has been faithfully replicated in 2011 as a nifty clear plastic overlay.


Release Date: 2011-08-26