The Drift
title: "The Drift" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["2006-albums", "4ad-albums", "cultural-depictions-of-benito-mussolini", "scott-walker-(singer)-albums", "albums-produced-by-peter-walsh", "albums-recorded-at-air-studios"] topic_path: "arts/music" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Drift" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::data[format=table title="Infobox album"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | The Drift |
| type | Studio |
| artist | Scott Walker |
| cover | Scott Walker - The Drift.jpg |
| released | |
| recorded | June 2004 – November 2005 |
| studio | Metropolis Studios, Chiswick, London, and AIR Studios, Hampstead, |
| genre | |
| length | |
| label | 4AD |
| producer | Scott Walker, Peter Walsh |
| prev_title | 5 Easy Pieces |
| prev_year | 2003 |
| next_title | And Who Shall Go to the Ball? And What Shall Go to the Ball? |
| next_year | 2007 |
| :: |
| name = The Drift | type = Studio | artist = Scott Walker | cover = Scott Walker - The Drift.jpg | alt = | released = | recorded = June 2004 – November 2005 | venue = | studio = Metropolis Studios, Chiswick, London, and AIR Studios, Hampstead, London | genre = | length = | label = 4AD | producer = Scott Walker, Peter Walsh | prev_title = 5 Easy Pieces | prev_year = 2003 | next_title = And Who Shall Go to the Ball? And What Shall Go to the Ball? | next_year = 2007 The Drift is the thirteenth solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Scott Walker, released on 8 May 2006 on 4AD. Apart from composing the soundtrack to the film Pola X, the album was Walker's first studio album in eleven years and only his third studio album since the final disbanding of The Walker Brothers in 1978. Walker composed the songs for the album slowly over the decade after the release of 1995's Tilt,{{cite book | first= Lewis | last= Williams | year= 2006 | title= Scott Walker - The Rhymes of Goodbye | edition= 1st | publisher= Plexus | location= London | isbn= 0-85965-395-1 | page= 179}} beginning with "Cue" (the longest song to complete), up until the album's recording. An early version of "Psoriatic" was premiered at the Meltdown festival on 17 June 2000 under the title "Thimble Rigging".
The album was recorded over a period of 17 months at Metropolis Studios in Chiswick, London, with orchestra recorded in one day at George Martin's AIR Studios in Hampstead, London. Receiving positive reviews from critics before its release, the album was released as an LP and CD in May 2006. The artwork for the album was designed by Vaughan Oliver at v23 with assistance from Chris Bigg and photography by Marc Atkins.
Overview
Walker's first album composed entirely of new material since 1995's Tilt, The Drift forms the second installment of what Walker later called "kind of a trilogy" that concluded with 2012's Bish Bosch. In the years between Tilt and The Drift, Walker's released output comprised a few instrumental tracks on the soundtrack to the film Pola X, a cover of Bob Dylan's "I Threw It All Away" on the To Have and to Hold soundtrack, and "Only Myself to Blame" from The World Is Not Enough soundtrack, as well as a few compilations of previously released material, including the retrospective box set 5 Easy Pieces.
The Drift has been cited by many critics and fans alike as a disturbing and complex album that departs from Scott Walker's previous albums while still remaining true to his experimental roots. French singer Vanessa Contenay-Quinones appears as the voice of Clara Petacci on "Clara".
The sound and subject matter for the album is unrelentingly dark and unsettling, often juxtaposing quiet sections with sudden loud noise to induce discomfort in the listener. Subjects include torture, disease, 9/11, Elvis Presley and his stillborn twin brother Jesse Garon Presley, the death and subsequent public hanging of Benito Mussolini and his mistress Clara Petacci, and the Srebrenica massacre.
In a bonus interview for the documentary Scott Walker: 30 Century Man, Walker states the album has commonalities with conceptual art as well as poetry.
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Track listing
| all_writing = Scott Walker, except "Psoriatic" (Scott Walker/Bob Carleton) | title1 = Cossacks Are | length1 = 4:32 | title2 = Clara | length2 = 12:43 | title3 = Jesse | length3 = 6:28 | title4 = Jolson and Jones | length4 = 7:45 | title5 = Cue | length5 = 10:27 | title6 = Hand Me Ups | length6 = 5:49 | title7 = Buzzers | length7 = 6:39 | title8 = Psoriatic | length8 = 5:51 | title9 = The Escape | length9 = 5:18 | title10 = A Lover Loves | length10 = 3:11
Personnel
- Scott Walker – vocals, guitar, harmonica, saxophone, sound treatment
- Hugh Burns – guitar
- Ian Thomas – drums
- Mark Warman – keyboards, orchestration, conducting, percussion, woodwinds, sound treatment
- Philip Sheppard – orchestration, conducting, cello
- Alasdair Malloy – percussion, drums
- John Giblin – bass
- Steve Pearce – bass
- Peter Walsh – sound treatment, sitar guitar, percussion
- Andrew Cronshaw – woodwinds, concertina
- James Stevenson – guitar
- Brian Gascoigne – keyboards, sound treatment
- Thomas Bowes – violin
- Vanessa Contenay-Quinones – vocals
- Beverly Foster – voice
- Pete Long – saxophone
- Rohan Onraet – percussion
- Lucy Painter – vocals
- Rebecca Painter – vocals
- Ralph Warman – vocals
- Derek Watkins – flugelhorn
::data[format=table]
| Session 1 | Violin I | Violin II | Cello | Bass |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Janice Graham | ||||
| Paul Willey | Steve Morris | |||
| Simon Smith | Alistair Blayden | |||
| Nick Roberts | Neil Tarlton | |||
| Chris West | ||||
| Julian Tear | ||||
| Ofer Falk | Deborah Widdup | |||
| Alison Kelly | Jane Fenton | |||
| Andrew Fuller | Matthew Corman | |||
| Clare Tyack | ||||
| Sophie Barber | ||||
| Ben Buckton | Clive Dobbins | |||
| Amanda Smith | John Tunnell | |||
| Tamsy Kaner | Roger Linley | |||
| Diane Clark | ||||
| Clare Hoffman | ||||
| Elizabeth Wexler | Ulrike Kipp | |||
| Jo Godden | Judith Herbert | |||
| Jackie Phillips | ||||
| Karen Leishman | ||||
| Matthew Scrivener | Ruth Funnell | |||
| Sue Briscoe | Robert Max | |||
| Roberto Sorrentino | ||||
| :: |
::data[format=table]
| Session 2 | Violin I | Violin II | Cello | Bass |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Michael Davis | ||||
| Paul Willey | Steve Morris | |||
| Simon Smith | Alistair Blayden | |||
| Nick Roberts | Neil Tarlton | |||
| Chris West | ||||
| Julian Tear | ||||
| Ofer Falk | Deborah Widdup | |||
| Alison Kelly | Jane Fenton | |||
| Andrew Fuller | Matthew Corman | |||
| Clare Tyack | ||||
| Sophie Barber | ||||
| Ben Buckton | Clive Dobbins | |||
| Amanda Smith | John Tunnell | |||
| Tamsy Kaner | Roger Linley | |||
| Diane Clark | ||||
| Clare Hoffman | ||||
| Elizabeth Wexler | Ulrike Kipp | |||
| Jo Godden | Judith Herbert | |||
| Jackie Phillips | ||||
| Ralph De Souza | ||||
| Robert Salter | Charles Sewart | |||
| Celia Sheen | Jonathan Williams | |||
| Joely Koos | ||||
| :: |
Production
- Produced by Scott Walker & Peter Walsh
- Engineers: Geoff Foster, Peter Walsh
- Mixing: Peter Walsh
Release history
::data[format=table]
| Region | Date | Label | Format | Catalogue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | 4AD | LP2×LP | CAD 2603 | |
| CD | CAD 2603 CD | |||
| United States | 4AD | CD | ||
| Japan | Hostess | CD | HSE-20015 | |
| :: |
Charts
::data[format=table] | Chart || Position | |---| | Belgian Albums Chart | | German Albums Chart | | Irish Albums Chart | | url=https://www.officialcharts.com/artists/ | title=Scott Walker| website=Official Charts Company | access-date=12 February 2009}} | ::
References
References
- Murray, Noel. (December 6, 2012). "Navigating the diverse, difficult musical career of Scott Walker".
- Dennis, Jon. (March 5, 2014). "10 of the best: Scott Walker".
- Frank Deserto. October 31, 2017. [https://www.post-punk.com/40-years-of-goth-essential-albums-from-the-genres-beginnings/ 40 Years of Goth: Essential Albums from the Genre's Beginnings] {{webarchive. [link](https://web.archive.org/web/20190119174259/https://www.post-punk.com/40-years-of-goth-essential-albums-from-the-genres-beginnings/. [[Post-Punk.com]].)
- Hattenstone, Simon. (23 November 2012). "Scott Walker: Brother beyond". [[The Guardian]].
- "Scott Walker Radio Interview for World Cafe 2013".
- Williams, Ben. (2006). "Elvis Dreams of 9/11".
- Young, Rob. (May 2006). "Interview with Scott Walker". [[The Wire (magazine).
- "Scott Walker Interview (1 of 2)".
- "The Drift by Scott Walker".
- "The Drift - Scott Walker | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic".
- ''[[Alternative Press (magazine). Alternative Press]]'' July 2006 issue, page 210
- (May 5, 2006). "CD: Scott Walker, The Drift".
- "Independent Online Edition > Reviews".
- Page 102, Issue #151
- (7 May 2006). "Scott Walker - the Drift | Album Reviews".
- Guardian Staff. (April 23, 2006). "Scott Walker, The Drift".
- (January 19, 2007). "Scott Walker: The Drift: Pitchfork Record Review".
- (May 20, 2006). "PLAYLOUDER | review - The Drift".
- "TLS - Times Literary Supplement".
- "Scott Walker - The Drift". Hung Medien.
- "UK, German and French charts".
- "Scott Walker".
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