Oranges & Lemons by XTC

Album cover for Oranges & Lemons - XTC
1. Garden of Earthly Delights
5:02
2. Mayor of Simpleton
3:58
3. King for a Day
3:36
4. Here Comes President Kill Again
3:34
5. The Loving
4:11
6. Poor Skeleton Steps Out
3:27
7. One of the Millions
4:41
8. Scarecrow People
4:14
1. Merely a Man
3:26
2. Cynical Days
3:18
3. Across This Antheap
4:48
4. Hold Me My Daddy
3:47
5. Pink Thing
3:48
6. Miniature Sun
3:54
7. Chalkhills and Children
4:55

Oranges & Lemons is the eleventh studio album by English band XTC, released in 1989. The tenth studio album was actually the Dukes Of Stratosphears second release 'Psonic Psunspot'. The name of the album came from the old English nursery rhyme, also referenced in the song "Ballet for a Rainy Day" on their previous album Skylarking. Oranges & Lemons was XTC's second double album, after 1982's English Settlement. The band was sent to Los Angeles to record the album, and Paul Fox was recruited for his first producing gig.

As its cover art and album title suggest, <i>Oranges & Lemons</i> represents the psychedelic vision of XTC, as much as such a concept could exist in 1989. The group had already issued several retro-psychedelic records as their alter-egos ‘The Dukes of Stratosphear’, emphasizing their ties to ‘60s pop, so it was hardly a stylistic shock when XTC extended these leanings to their proper group. In retrospect, it’s less a shift than a re-juggling of the band’s priorities. In the past, much of XTC’s appeal had been their jarring rhythms and slashing guitars. Over the years, the band experimented with increasingly complex arrangements that shaded their songs in dramatic light. Though the group expressed displeasure with Todd Rundgren’s production of 1986’s <i>Skylarking</i>, it was that careful effort that set the stage for this intricately sculpted collection. While “The Mayor of Simpleton” distills XTC’s essence to its most mind-humming basics, the baroque, carnival-esque excitement of “King for a Day,” “The Loving,” “Merely a Man” and “Chalkhills and Children” make for smart, adventurous listening.