Coming Up With The Sunshine: Radio-Ed O'Brien's Favourite Music | Page 12 of 14 | The Quietus

Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

11. Primal ScreamScreamadelica

Listening to this in Brazil a few years ago was a proper Eureka moment for me. We’d moved to the middle of nowhere for seven months, and I decided to properly have some time properly listening to music, so got a lot of stuff off Thom on a hard drive. I was really into Burial and that side of dubstep back then. Stuff that works perfectly underneath railway arches at 3am strangely enough didn’t resonate on the edge of the rainforest, though. What did was Screamadelica. 

I’d first heard Loaded when I was studying at Manchester University in 1990. I remember it coming out after ‘Fools Gold’ and ‘Hallelujah’, and seeing Primal Scream on a double-header with Looper. I remember thinking, ah, this is good, a bit different for them, but they’re jumping on the bandwagon, aren’t they? Later, ‘Don’t Fight It Feel It’ became the ultimate tune of that time for me.

But away from that time, this album still stands alone. It’s so colourful. It’s like gospel dance music. It’s got all the euphoria of house music, plus the community and love. It reminded me that that moment in culture wasn’t just about the drugs – those drugs were just there to pierce the veil. Music held the ultimate power to bring people up. I want my music to have that joy, that light, that sense of possibility.

Selected in other Baker’s Dozens: Chris Packham, Suggs
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