Robyn Hitchcock - "Black Snake Dîamond Röle”
- B-Side

- May 4
- 3 min read

45 years ago, Robyn Hitchcock released “Black Snake Dîamond Röle.” Following two studio LPs fronting his band The Soft Boys, this was the 28-year-old London surrealist ‘neo-psych’ songwriter’s first solo album, though all his mates from The Soft Boys contributed. Reviews are now very good to excellent, though it did not sell many copies and was only available in the U.S. as an import for five years. Fan-favorite tracks include “I Watch the Cars” “Brenda’s Iron Sledge” “Acid Bird” “Love” “The Man Who Invented Himself” + “Do Policemen Sing?”. Fun facts: In 2017, Robyn performed the album live in its entirety, with Yo La Tengo as his backing band. Hitchcock's 25th solo album "The Confuser" will be issued July 24. More in Comments.
May 4 Birthdays: Al Dexter b.1905; Maurice Purtill (The Glenn Miller Orchestra) b.1916; Mary Ann McCall b.1919; Ed Cassidy (Spirit) and Guy Warren b.1923; Sonny Payne b.1926; Maynard Ferguson b.1928; Richard Williams b.1931; Don Friedman b.1935; Dick Dale b.1937; Tyrone Davis b.1938; Ronnie Bond (The Troggs) b.1940; David LaFlamme (It's a Beautiful Day) b.1941; Nickolas Ashford (Ashford & Simpson) b.1942; Darryl Hunt (The Pogues) b.1950; Jacob Miller b.1952; Sharon Jones b.1956; Tom Laskin (Appliances-SFB) b.1957; Warren Smith is 92; Ron Carter (Miles Davis Quintet) is 89; Georg Wadenius is 81; Zal Cleminson (The Sensational Alex Harvey Band / Nazareth) is 77; Colin Bass (Camel / 3 Mustaphas 3) and Jackie Jackson (The Jacksons) and Mick Mars (Mötley Crüe) are 75; Oleta Adams is 73; Soozie Tyrell (E Street Band) is 69; Randy Travis is 67; Gary Holt (Exodus / Slayer) is 62; Anders Osborne is 60; Gregg Alexander (The New Radicals) is 56; Mike Dirnt (Green Day) is 54; Victoria Bergsman (The Concretes / Taken By Trees) is 49; Lance Bass (NSYNC) is 47; Hatchie is 33; Rex Orange County is 28.
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Review by Mark Deming
The Soft Boys' fusion of the energy of punk and the baroque textures and melodic twists of psychedelia was ahead of its time, but for the group's leader, Robyn Hitchcock, that had become a problem. Brilliant as their music was, hardly anyone was listening when the Soft Boys released their masterpiece, Underwater Moonlight, in 1980 -- so a year later the band was history and Hitchcock released his first solo album, Black Snake Diamond Role.
While the other three members of the Soft Boys appeared on the album (guitarist Kimberley Rew, bassist Matthew Seligman, and drummer Morris Windsor) along with Vince Ely of the Psychedelic Furs, Knox from the Vibrators, and a then-unknown Thomas Dolby, Black Snake Diamond Role represented a subtle but clear shift away from the more aggressive tone of the Soft Boys toward a more pop-oriented sound. "The Man Who Invented Himself" is user-friendly in a way the Soft Boys had never been, and the production, while mostly straightforward, is more polished and professional.
Even though the surfaces of this album are more welcoming than the Soft Boys, the surrealism of the lyrics and the trippy undertow of the melodies are in the same league as Hitchcock's earlier work, and while "Acid Bird," "Out of the Picture," and "Brenda's Iron Sledge" are newly catchy and engaging, the guitar work on "I Watch the Cars" shows Hitchcock's vision had changed very little, and the menace of "Do Policemen Sing?" is only slightly undercut by its wit. Black Snake Diamond Role staked out a distinct sonic territory for Hitchcock's solo career that still made room for the abundant talent he'd displayed in his years with the Soft Boys, and remains one of his most enjoyable efforts.
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