The first Psychic TV album in many ways remains its best,
a double album worthy of the space needed that's readily comparable to the best
efforts of the World Serpent circle of acts like Current 93 and Coil in its
variety, dark power and very English take on things. Admittedly the Coil (and
therefore Throbbing Gristle) connection is further heightened by the
participation of Peter Christopherson throughout, while Alex Fergusson's
re-emergence after time spent with Alternative TV further heightens the overall
musical excellence of the album. Add in some fine guest performers -- most
notably Marc Almond, who appears on the winsome pop of "Stolen
Kisses" and the slow burning, threatening mood piece "Guiltless"
-- and Genesis P-Orridge would have had to work damn hard to screw everything
up, which he certainly didn't. The opening track alone must have confounded
more than a few Throbbing Gristle fanatics -- "Just Drifting (For
Caresse)" is a slow folk song with gentle string backing written for and
about P-Orridge's newborn daughter. The musical references throughout the album
refer to everything from Ennio Morricone-styled spaghetti western twang and
doom ("Terminus-Xtul," which eventually transforms into a grinding
howl of feedback and a calm acoustic coda) to post-punk dance grooves ("Ov
Power," in a "radio promo mix" that's still not entirely
American Bandstand material). Bachir Attar and the Master Musicians of Joujouka
get a direct salute with "Thee Full Pack" which, while not representative
of that collective's music, still sets a haunting, mysterious mood. The Temple
ov Psychick Youth coterie doubtless still gets a kick out of "Message from
Thee Temple," in which an authoritative but warm voice quietly delivers
some philosophical strictures against a rich, sorrowful combination of strings
and low key beats.