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〕 | rev2 = ''Classic Rock'' | rev2Score = |rev3 = ''Entertainment Weekly'' |rev3score = B+〔DiMartino, Dave. ("Jehovahkill" ). ''Entertainment Weekly''. January 1993. Retrieved 7 October 2012.〕 |rev4 = ''Q'' |rev4score = 〔Columnist. "Peggy Suicide". ''Q''. October 1994. p. 135, cited 7 October 2012〕 |rev5 = ''Rolling Stone'' |rev5score = 〔Columnist. "Peggy Suicide". ''Rolling Stone''. May 1991, cited 7 October 2012〕 }} ''Jehovahkill'' is the eighth album by Julian Cope, released in 1992. The album cover depicts the Callanish Stones, a site with a cruciform layout that predates Christ by at least 2,000 years. ==History== In 1992 Cope delivered his eleven-track ''Julian H. Cope'' album to Island Records. Its "dark and challenging"〔 content was not well-received, with Cope's A&R man going as far as to describe "Slow Rider" as "the worst song he'd heard by anybody in his life".〔 According to Cope, the "results were certainly more sonically imbalanced and experimental" than anything he'd previously achieved. Island refused to issue the album.〔 When Cope explained that it was what he'd set out to achieve and "would prefer to stand or fall by the results"〔 he was allowed additional recording sessions. Although the existing content remained almost untouched, the album, re-titled ''Jehovahkill'', was "ameliorated" with six further songs, including "Fa-Fa-Fa-Fine", "The Mystery Trend" and "No Hard Shoulder To Cry On".〔 Within a week of the album's release, Island dropped Cope claiming, "his critical appeal is on the up but his commercial appeal is dropping",〔 the dismissal causing unexpected outrage in the music press.〔 In 2006 a "Second Edition" was released, containing material from ''Julian H. Cope'' and the ''Fear Loves This Place'' EP, including the Dictaphone-recorded "Nothing".〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jehovahkill」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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