Confessions of a Pop Group
Confessions of a Pop Group is the fourth and final full-length studio album by the English sophisti-pop band The Style Council, released on 20 June 1988 by Polydor Records.[1][2] Formed in 1983 by Paul Weller—formerly of punk rock band The Jam—alongside keyboardist Mick Talbot, The Style Council blended soul, jazz, and pop elements, evolving from Weller's mod and soul roots into more eclectic territory.[3] The album features 11 tracks, including the title song "Confessions of a Pop-Group," which critiques the music industry and political climate under Margaret Thatcher through layered funk grooves and spoken-word elements.[4] Produced solely by Weller and Talbot to maintain creative control, it incorporates experimental structures, horn sections, and influences from free jazz and avant-garde music, diverging from the band's earlier commercial successes.[5] Upon release, Confessions of a Pop Group faced scathing critical reception, described as overindulgent and pretentious, and achieved modest commercial performance, peaking at number 15 on the UK Albums Chart—its lowest position to date.[5][6][7] The poor response contributed to the band's disbandment the following year, after which Weller launched a solo career focused on rock and Britpop influences.[8] Despite initial dismissal, the album has garnered retrospective appreciation for its bold artistic risks among some music enthusiasts.[9]Development
Conception and Background
The Style Council's Confessions of a Pop Group emerged amid Paul Weller's growing disillusionment following the failure of the Red Wedge political movement and Margaret Thatcher's 1987 election victory, which dashed hopes for progressive change in the UK. As the band's fourth studio album, it followed the commercially underwhelming The Cost of Loving (1987), prompting Weller to pursue a more experimental direction unburdened by prior pop-oriented constraints. By this point, core members Weller and keyboardist Mick Talbot felt the group's formula had grown stale, leading Weller to view the project as a potential swan song, though he initially believed it to be his finest work.[5][10] Conception began in 1987 when Weller sketched the material over two weeks at his parents' house on England's south coast, utilizing a grand piano to compose poetry that he later adapted into music during an intense creative period. Weller and Talbot opted for self-production to maintain artistic control and sidestep conflicts with external producers experienced on previous efforts. The album's structure divided into instrumental "Piano Paintings" on the first side and more vocal-driven tracks on the second, reflecting Weller's ambition to blend pop with elevated forms.[5][11] Influences drew heavily from classical and jazz traditions, including Impressionist composers like Erik Satie and Claude Debussy, the vocal ensemble Swingle Singers, and modern jazz figures akin to the Modern Jazz Quartet, alongside nods to Brian Wilson's harmonic innovations. Weller aimed to chronicle contemporary societal malaise, elevate pop music's status to high art, and create a timeless statement, prioritizing personal authenticity over commercial viability: "We had to do what felt right," even at the risk of alienating fans. Recording occurred at Solid Bond Studios in London during 1988, incorporating orchestral elements such as harp and strings to realize these visions.[5][11]Recording Process
The recording of Confessions of a Pop Group began with a two-week sketching phase at Paul Weller's parents' house on the south coast of England, where initial compositions were developed on a grand piano in the family's front room.[5] Weller described this period as a "creative burst," during which pieces were first written as poetry before being set to music, reflecting an experimental approach that prioritized artistic ambition over commercial expectations.[5] Subsequent full recording took place at Solid Bond Studios in London, with production handled jointly by Weller and Mick Talbot.[5][12] The core band members involved included Weller on vocals and guitar, Talbot on keyboards, drummer Steve White, and backing vocalist Dee C. Lee, supplemented by guest contributions such as harp, a string quartet, and vocal ensemble The Swingle Singers on select tracks.[5] This setup facilitated the album's dual structure, with Side One comprising an instrumental piano suite ("The Piano Paintings") and Side Two featuring more conventional songs framed as "confessions."[5] The process emphasized pushing pop music's boundaries, incorporating classical influences and complex arrangements, though Weller acknowledged the risks: "We knew it might have consequences, might lose our audience but that wasn’t a consideration."[5] No major production delays or technical issues are documented, but the album's sophisticated orchestration demanded precise overdubbing and ensemble coordination at the studio.[1]Content and Style
Musical Composition
Confessions of a Pop Group employs a bifurcated structure across its two sides, with Side One, subtitled "The Piano Paintings," featuring experimental piano suites influenced by jazz and classical music, characterized by calm, composed arrangements incorporating acoustic elements, strings, harp, and vibraphone.[5][2] This side includes extended compositions such as the 10-minute epic "The Gardener of Eden," structured in three movements with minimal drums, choirs, and orchestral flourishes reminiscent of impressionist composers like Debussy and Satie, alongside vocal group harmonies akin to the Swingle Singers and the Modern Jazz Quartet.[5][13] Side Two shifts to more conventional pop structures with self-reflective lyrics, incorporating slick funk grooves, electro-funk rhythms, horns, keyboards, and bass lines, as heard in tracks like "Life at a Top People’s Health Farm," which blends funky bass and jazz-inflected elements, and the title track, featuring soulful crooning over seething electronic beats.[5][13] Instrumentation across the album draws from sophisti-pop traditions, with piano prominently featured from Paul Weller's initial demos, supplemented by harp (Rupert Parker), string quartets, Hammond organ, synthesizers, clavinet (Mick Talbot), drums (Steve White), bass (Camelle Hinds), and occasional sequencing and drum machines.[14][15] The arrangements evoke George Martin's orchestral approaches, blending chamber pop with art pop experimentation, while paying tribute to Brian Wilson's harmonic style in a coda on Side One.[13][5] The album's genre-bending composition prioritizes ambitious fusion over commercial accessibility, integrating quiet storm soul, punk-infused critique, and French new wave impressions within an overarching sophisti-pop framework, resulting in a cohesive yet divisive musical narrative.[5][13]Artwork and Packaging
The artwork and sleeve design for Confessions of a Pop Group were credited to The Style Council (TSC) and Jezar, reflecting the band's direct involvement in the visual presentation.[1] Additional sleeve design input came from SJH, likely referring to collaborator Simon Halfon.[16] This internal creative control aligned with Paul Weller's overarching artistic vision for the project, emphasizing experimental and conceptual elements.[5] Packaging for the original vinyl LP edition (Polydor TSCLP 5) featured a standard sleeve with a glossy 6-page foldout insert containing lyrics and liner notes.[1] Some early pressings included a supplementary 6-page 1988 calendar, enhancing collector appeal.[1] The compact disc version (835 785-2) utilized jewel case packaging with a booklet mirroring the vinyl's insert content, while cassette editions (835 785-4) employed standard plastic cases.[1] Limited promotional sets, such as a UK box containing video selections, highlighted bespoke packaging for industry distribution.[17] Later reissues, including 2017 colored vinyl and remastered CDs, retained original artwork while updating formats for modern playback.Release and Promotion
Formats and Distribution
Confessions of a Pop Group was released on June 20, 1988, in vinyl LP, compact disc, and cassette formats by Polydor Records.[18] The UK vinyl edition featured the catalogue number 835 785-1 or TSCLP 5, while the compact disc bore 835 785-2 and the cassette 835 785-4.[1] These formats included the standard track listing of fourteen songs, with the vinyl and cassette versions adhering to side divisions typical of analog media.[1] The album achieved international distribution through Polydor subsidiaries and affiliates. In the United States, the vinyl release used the catalogue number 422 835 785-1, with PolyGram overseeing broader North American operations including Canada.[19] Editions appeared in markets such as Australia, Japan, Brazil, Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Yugoslavia, often under Polydor or local imprints like PGP RTB.[1] Subsequent reissues expanded availability, including a remastered compact disc in Europe in 2000 (Polydor 557 916-2) and a limited white vinyl LP in 2017.[1] Japanese editions featured additional reissues in 1990, 2000, 2001, and 2008, some utilizing SHM-CD technology.[1] No official digital download or streaming releases were noted in the original distribution phase, consistent with pre-digital era practices.[20]Marketing Efforts
The Style Council's marketing for Confessions of a Pop Group emphasized a deluxe multi-format package to differentiate it from standard album releases, comprising the primary vinyl LP, a bonus cassette featuring home demos under the subtitle The Democratic Club, and an included 7-inch single.[1] This structure provided listeners with behind-the-scenes material, including rough sketches and alternate takes, positioning the album as an immersive exploration of the band's artistry rather than a conventional pop product.[21] Polydor also distributed promotional box sets to industry insiders, containing sampler cassettes, VHS tapes of preview content (running approximately 13 minutes), and custom packaging to generate buzz ahead of the June 20, 1988, launch.[21] Singles promotion focused on "How She Threw It All Away," issued on July 16, 1988, as the lead extraction from the album's more accessible first side, with B-sides like "Life at a Top People's Health Farm."[22] The track entered the UK Singles Chart on July 23, 1988, reaching a peak of number 41 over two weeks, reflecting modest radio and retail push amid the band's evolving sound.[23] Print advertising campaigns appeared in UK music publications and extended to markets like Japan, featuring full-page ads highlighting the album's eclectic blend.[24] These efforts, however, were tempered by the project's experimental leanings, with limited touring; instead, promotion leaned on media appearances, including April 1988 interviews and live demonstrations of tracks in television specials.[3]Commercial Performance
Chart Positions and Sales
Confessions of a Pop Group entered the UK Albums Chart at number 15 on 27 June 1988, its peak position, and remained on the chart for three weeks total.[25] In the United States, the album reached number 174 on the Billboard 200 chart.[13] No significant chart performance was recorded in other major markets such as Australia or Germany based on available data. Sales figures reflect the album's limited commercial success. In the United Kingdom, it sold an estimated 60,000 copies, qualifying for silver certification from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), which requires 60,000 units for albums.[26] In Japan, Oricon charts reported 37,980 units sold.[26] No gold or platinum certifications were achieved in the US or elsewhere, and global sales estimates remain unavailable, though the album underperformed relative to prior Style Council releases like The Cost of Loving, which exceeded 100,000 UK sales.[27]Factors Influencing Market Reception
The Style Council's Confessions of a Pop Group, released on June 20, 1988, achieved a peak position of number 15 on the UK Albums Chart, marking the band's first album outside the top 10 and representing a commercial decline from prior releases like Home and Abroad (1986), which had stronger sales momentum.[13][28] This underperformance stemmed partly from the album's unconventional structure as a double LP, with Side A adhering to the band's sophisti-pop roots while Side B ventured into experimental fusions of jazz, classical (drawing from Erik Satie), and avant-garde elements inspired by artists like the Beach Boys, alienating listeners accustomed to more accessible soul-jazz fare.[9][5] Singles drawn from the album, such as "How She Threw It All Away," peaked modestly at number 41 on the UK Singles Chart, failing to generate the radio play or crossover appeal of earlier hits like "Shout to the Top!" (1985, number 7), which limited promotional momentum and retail visibility.[29] Paul Weller's artistic pivot toward self-reflective, less politically charged lyrics—contrasting his prior Red Wedge activism—further distanced fans expecting the earnest mod-pop anthems that had sustained The Style Council's mid-1980s popularity amid a shifting UK scene dominated by emerging house and indie sounds.[5][30] Label support from Polydor waned post-release, with executives viewing the album's introspective and structurally ambitious approach as commercially unviable, leading to rejection of subsequent material and effectively ending the band's major-label run; this internal friction exacerbated distribution challenges in an era when physical sales relied heavily on sustained marketing pushes.[31][32] Overall, the interplay of stylistic risks, subdued single traction, and diminishing industry backing positioned Confessions as the nadir of The Style Council's market fortunes, though its cult status has grown retrospectively among niche audiences valuing Weller's boundary-pushing intent.[9]Reception
Contemporary Critical Reviews
The Style Council's Confessions of a Pop Group, released on 20 June 1988, met with largely scathing critical reception in the British music press, which often derided its experimental structure—divided into a pop-oriented first side and a more avant-garde, classically influenced second side—as overly ambitious and pretentious. Critics highlighted the album's departure from accessible sophisti-pop toward fragmented compositions incorporating piano suites, spoken-word elements, and genre eclecticism, arguing that such innovations undermined Paul Weller's songwriting strengths and resulted in incoherence. For example, Melody Maker's Allan Jones lambasted the record in a July 1988 review, likening Weller's self-seriousness to misguided artistic hubris, a sentiment echoed across outlets that viewed the project as emblematic of the band's growing detachment from mainstream audiences.[33][34] This negative consensus contributed to the album's commercial struggles, as it peaked at number 15 on the UK Albums Chart—its lowest position to date—and failed to produce significant hits despite singles like "Life at a Top People's Health Food Store." Some reviewers acknowledged Weller's intent to critique pop conventions and explore broader musical palettes, but such defenses were rare amid widespread dismissal of the album's "pompous" tone and uneven execution. Publications like NME and others in the era's rock-oriented press, often skeptical of post-Jam evolutions in Weller's output, reinforced a narrative of decline, prioritizing punk-derived authenticity over the record's conceptual risks.[5][9] Overall, contemporary critiques framed Confessions as a misstep in The Style Council's trajectory, with its bold fusion of soul, funk, and orchestral ambitions cited as evidence of creative overreach rather than innovation, though isolated voices noted potential in tracks like the funky closer "Confessions of a Pop Group." This reception underscored tensions in late-1980s UK music journalism, where experimental pop faced scrutiny for straying from guitar-rock roots, influencing the label's subsequent rejection of the band's next project.[35][19]Initial Fan and Industry Responses
Upon its release on June 20, 1988, Confessions of a Pop Group debuted at number 15 on the UK Albums Chart, becoming the first Style Council album to fail to reach the top ten and exiting the chart after a short run.[28] This commercial underperformance reflected waning industry support amid the band's shift toward experimental formats, including multi-part suites and orchestral elements that diverged from mainstream pop expectations.[5] Critics issued largely scathing assessments, with many decrying the album's ambitious structure—featuring tripartite compositions and self-reflective polemics—as pretentious and disconnected from contemporary tastes.[9] Publications mauled it for its pompous tone and lack of commercial viability, consigning it to bargain bins shortly after launch.[36] Paul Weller later reflected that the reception ranged from lukewarm to savage, drawing "venom" for its stylistic risks, though he maintained it captured a deliberate evolution in sound.[33] Initial fan responses mirrored this negativity, with many expressing confusion and disillusionment over the album's departure from the band's earlier soul-inflected pop, leading to a perceptible desertion in audience loyalty.[9] Live performances of tracks like "Confessions 1, 2, 3" elicited only polite applause from crowds, signaling broader public unimpressedness and contributing to the Style Council's declining momentum.[33] While a core of dedicated followers appreciated the lyrical introspection and musical experimentation, the prevailing reaction underscored a rift between Weller's artistic intent and fan expectations for accessible hits.[37]Retrospective Assessments
Over the decades following its 1988 release, Confessions of a Pop Group by The Style Council has experienced a marked reappraisal, transitioning from widespread critical dismissal to recognition as an ambitious and innovative work in Paul Weller's catalog. Initially peaking at number 15 on the UK Albums Chart—its lowest position to date—and facing accusations of pretentiousness for its experimental structure, the album's blend of piano suites, soulful tracks, and political commentary was later praised for elevating pop music toward art-form aspirations amid Thatcher-era disillusionment.[5] In a 2018 retrospective, The Quietus described the album as Weller's "most honest and influential" effort, highlighting its artistic bravery in fusing influences from Erik Satie, the Beach Boys, and the Swingle Singers into intimate, socially astute compositions that documented "dismal times" while challenging mainstream expectations. The publication noted its rising status, attributing early rejection to its uncompromised directness, which clashed with commercial pop norms but now stands as a prescient critique of genre conventions. Key tracks like "It's a Very Deep Sea" and "The Little Boy in the Castle/A Dove Flew Down from the Elephant" were commended for their sumptuous melancholy and orchestral ambition, reflecting Weller's intent to "elevate pop to an art form."[5] A 2023 ranking by Mojo magazine placed Confessions third among The Style Council's studio albums, affirming its reappraisal as a "classic" despite initial fan and critic rejection, with sales lagging behind prior releases. The assessment emphasized its genre-spanning strengths, including piano-led introspection in "Changing of the Guard" and energetic '80s soul in "Life at a Top People's Health Farm" and "How She Threw It All Away," positioning the record as a bold pivot that foreshadowed Weller's solo evolution toward introspective artistry.[9] User-driven platforms have echoed this shift, with aggregated ratings on sites like Rate Your Music averaging 3.5 out of 5 from over 440 reviews, often citing its depth and replay value for rewarding listeners who engage beyond surface-level pop expectations. While not universally hailed—some critiques persist on uneven execution in experimental passages—the album's retrospective value lies in its unfiltered self-reflection on fame and cultural stagnation, influencing later sophisti-pop and art-pop explorations.[2]Themes and Artistic Intent
Lyrical Content and Self-Reflection
The lyrics on Confessions of a Pop Group emphasize personal introspection and regret, particularly in tracks exploring past mistakes and emotional failures. In "It's a Very Deep Sea," Weller reflects on futile efforts to reclaim lost time, with lines such as "Dredging up the past that has gone for good / Trying to polish up what is rotting wood," symbolizing irreversible decay in personal endeavors.[5] Similarly, "The Story of Someone's Shoe" delivers a stark confessional account of a one-night stand's aftermath, blending graphic imagery with musical elegance to underscore human frailty.[5] Relationship breakdowns form a core theme of self-examination, as evidenced in "Why I Went Missing" and "How She Threw It All Away," which draw from Weller's experiences with his first girlfriend, Gill Price, portraying themes of abandonment and lost potential.[5] The title track, "Confessions of a Pop-Group," extends this inward gaze to critique cultural and industry complacency, decrying a "cheap and tacky bullshit land" where society recreates the past at the expense of progress, culminating in warnings of inevitable breakdown.[4] These lyrics intertwine personal vulnerability with broader disillusionment, marking the album as a candid reckoning with Weller's artistic path.[5] Weller intended the record as a deliberate endpoint for The Style Council, aiming to "document the dismal times" while aspiring to transform pop into high art, reflecting awareness of the band's waning relevance.[5] He later noted, "If this is going to be our last time, we better make sure it counts," underscoring the album's role as a self-reflective swansong amid perceived cultural stagnation under Thatcherism.[5] This intent manifests in the lyrics' shift from earlier optimism to resignation, mapping Weller's acknowledged "personal fallibility and frailty."[5]Critiques of Pop Music Conventions
The album Confessions of a Pop Group subverts pop music conventions through its bifurcated structure, with Side A emphasizing experimental, piano-driven jazz and orchestral elements that eschew verse-chorus predictability in favor of impressionistic soundscapes.[38] This approach, inspired by composers like Erik Satie and the harmonic complexities of the Beach Boys, deliberately rejects the streamlined, radio-friendly formulas that dominated 1980s mainstream pop, prioritizing artistic expansion over commercial accessibility.[5] Paul Weller's production choices, including spoken-word confessionals and genre-blending, underscore a critique of pop's superficiality, positioning the work as a meta-commentary on the genre's limitations in addressing deeper social realities.[13] Lyrically, the title track "Confessions of a Pop Group" employs sardonic narration to expose pop's entanglement with societal hypocrisies, as in lines like "Cheap and tacky bullshit / Sold by the million to the willing," which mock the commodification of music and its detachment from authentic engagement with issues such as racial tensions and community disconnection.[4] Rather than romantic escapism typical of pop conventions, tracks like "Why Can't We Live Together" adapt Timmy Thomas's soul original into a politically charged plea against division, critiquing the genre's historical avoidance of overt activism in favor of apolitical entertainment.[5] Weller's refusal to prioritize hit singles—opting instead for a cohesive album statement—further challenges industry norms that equate success with chart-driven singles, reflecting his view of pop as constrained by market-driven repetition.[39] These elements collectively represent Weller's push to redefine pop's boundaries amid the band's waning commercial viability, with the album's poor reception (peaking at No. 15 on the UK Albums Chart) illustrating resistance to such deviations from convention.[5] Retrospective analyses note this as an intentional escalation of the Style Council's sophisti-pop ethos, using unconventional textures to critique the era's synth-pop and house trends for lacking depth or innovation.[40] By integrating classical and jazz influences without diluting political undertones, the record embodies a causal rejection of pop's formulaic causality—where hits follow predictable patterns—favoring instead empirical experimentation grounded in diverse musical traditions.[13]Legacy and Aftermath
Cultural Impact and Reappraisals
The album's experimental structure, divided into two conceptual sides—"The Piano Paintings" evoking classical composers such as Claude Debussy and Erik Satie through piano suites, harp, and string quartets, and a soul-infused counterpart—sought to expand pop music's artistic scope amid the cultural despondency following Margaret Thatcher's 1987 reelection.[5] This blend of opulent orchestration, including vibraphone and a cappella homages reminiscent of The Beach Boys and The Swingle Singers, with lyrics addressing class struggles, media propaganda, and Anglo-American military ties, positioned Confessions as a sonic document of late-1980s British disillusionment, diverging from the band's prior accessible sophisti-pop.[5] Commercially, the June 20, 1988, release peaked at number 15 on the UK Albums Chart, marking the first Style Council album outside the top 10 and leading Polydor to reject a planned follow-up and drop the band, curtailing their momentum after the underwhelming The Cost of Loving.[5] This outcome reflected a loss of audience alignment with Weller's escalating conceptual ambitions, contributing to the erosion of the band's cultural footprint at the time, though it underscored broader tensions in pop's negotiation of political engagement post-Red Wedge's faltering idealism.[5][41] Retrospective evaluations have reframed the album as Weller's rawest expression, influencing his solo pivot toward introspective, acoustic-driven works like Wild Wood (1993) and facilitating a reevaluation of its genre-fusing innovations.[5] Keyboardist Mick Talbot, in a 2020 interview, described it as a "return to form" with ambitious arrangements, praising overlooked tracks like "It’s a Very Deep Sea" as timeless amid growing fan appreciation for its depth.[41] Critics now often cite its intent to "elevate pop to an art form" while chronicling societal malaise, though its initial dismissal persists in views of it as an artistic overreach that hastened the band's dissolution.[5]Influence on Paul Weller's Career
The critical and commercial disappointment of Confessions of a Pop Group, which peaked at number 15 on the UK Albums Chart upon its release on 20 June 1988, exacerbated tensions within The Style Council and with their label Polydor, ultimately contributing to the band's dissolution in 1990.[5] Following the similarly underwhelming performance of the preceding album The Cost of Loving in 1987, the experimental structure of Confessions—divided into distinct "confessional" and "farewell" sides with influences from jazz, classical, and avant-garde elements—alienated much of Weller's audience and critics who favored the band's earlier sophisti-pop sound.[42] This backlash strained Weller's relationship with fans accustomed to The Jam's punk energy, prompting a reevaluation of his artistic direction.[39] The album's fallout directly paved the way for Weller's solo career, as the band's breakup freed him from group dynamics and label expectations tied to The Style Council's polished image. Weller's eponymous debut solo album arrived in August 1992, but it was the 1993 release Wild Wood that marked a pivotal stylistic pivot toward acoustic folk, psychedelic rock, and organic instrumentation, achieving number one status on the UK Albums Chart and restoring his commercial viability.[43] This shift represented a deliberate departure from the jazz-infused sophistication of Confessions, reconnecting with guitar-driven roots while incorporating matured songwriting reflective of personal introspection. In retrospect, Weller has credited the Style Council era, including its experimental risks like Confessions, with fostering resilience and broadening his musical palette, though the immediate career impact was a necessary rupture enabling solo reinvention.[44] Retrospective reassessments have elevated Confessions of a Pop Group as one of Weller's boldest works, influencing his later willingness to defy genre conventions in solo output, such as the eclectic Stanley Road (1995). However, its contemporary failure underscored the perils of rapid evolution post-The Jam, reinforcing Weller's meta-awareness of audience expectations in subsequent projects.[5]Band Dissolution
The Style Council's dissolution followed the commercial underperformance of Confessions of a Pop Group, which peaked at number 15 on the UK Albums Chart, marking their lowest-charting release to date.[5] This outcome exacerbated existing tensions with Polydor Records, as the label subsequently rejected the band's proposed follow-up material—initially prepared as an album tentatively titled Homecoming or Modernism: A New Decade—deeming it insufficiently commercial after 12 to 18 months of development.[31] [45] Paul Weller later regarded Confessions of a Pop Group as the band's final proper studio album, with the shelved project signaling the end of their collaborative viability.[31] Keyboardist Mick Talbot attributed the accelerated breakup to the frustration of expended effort yielding no release, describing it as feeling like "wasted time," while Weller believed the split should have occurred sooner to avoid prolonged stagnation.[45] The group formally disbanded in 1989, after which Weller entered a period of seclusion before launching his solo career in 1991; unfinished tracks from the rejected sessions surfaced posthumously on compilations like Modernism: A New Decade in 1998.[45]Credits
Track Listing
All tracks written by Paul Weller, except where noted.[11]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Side one | |||
| 1 | "It's a Very Deep Sea" | 5:32 | |
| 2 | "The Story of Someone's Shoe" | 3:42 | |
| 3 | "Changing of the Guard" | 2:52 | |
| 4 | "The Little Boy in a Castle" | 3:32 | |
| 5 | "A Dove Flew Down from the Elephant" | 1:55 | |
| Side two | |||
| 6 | "The Gardener of Eden" | 4:00 | |
| 7 | "Life at a Top People's Health Farm" | 4:18 | |
| 8 | "Why I Went Missing" | 4:43 | |
| 9 | "How She Threw It All Away" | 4:17 | |
| 10 | "Iwasadoledadstoyboy" | 4:27 | |
| 11 | "Confessions 1, 2 & 3" | 4:01 | |
| Total length: | 43:19 |