First Utterance is the debut studio album by the English progressive folk band Comus, released in February 1971 on the Dawn Records label.[1] The album features a blend of psychedelic folk, acid folk, and progressive rock elements, characterized by dark, ominous lyrics often exploring themes of violence, nature, and the supernatural, accompanied by intricate acoustic arrangements, violin, flute, and occasional electric guitar.[2] Recorded at PYE Studios in London between November and December 1970, it was produced by the band themselves and includes seven tracks: "Diana" (4:28), "The Herald" (5:30), "Drip Drip" (11:35), "Song to Comus" (7:25), "The Bite" (6:20), "Bitten" (0:30), and "The Prisoner" (6:20).[3]Comus formed in 1967 at Ravensbourne College of Art in Bromley, Kent, initially as a duo of guitarists Roger Wootton and Glenn Goring, who expanded the lineup to include Colin Pearson on violin, Andy Hellaby on bass, Bobbie Watson on vocals and percussion, and Rob Young on flute, oboe, and bongos by early 1970.[1] Drawing influences from artists like Captain Beefheart and traditional British folk, the band developed a unique sound that incorporated elements of avant-garde and horror-inspired psychedelia, leading to their debut single "Diana" maxi-single in 1971 and their first major gig supporting David Bowie at the Purcell Room in November 1969.[1] Despite positive critical notices, First Utterance achieved limited commercial success upon release, prompting tours across the UK and Europe before the band disbanded in 1972 following the departure of their manager.[1]The album gained a cult following in subsequent decades, particularly after its CD reissue in 1995 and expanded edition in 2005, influencing the folk horror genre and artists in the psychedelic folk revival.[4] Comus briefly reformed in 1974 to record a second album, To Keep from Crying, before splitting again, and reunited in 2008 for a performance at the Melloboat Festival in Sweden. The band released the EP Out of the Coma in 2012 and has continued to perform sporadically since then.[1][5] First Utterance remains Comus's most acclaimed work, celebrated for its eerie atmosphere and innovative fusion of folk traditions with experimental rock.[6]
Background
Band formation
Comus was formed in 1967 by Roger Wootton and Glenn Goring, two art students who met at Ravensbourne College of Art in Bromley, Kent, and began collaborating as a folk duo.[1][7] Initially influenced by contemporary British folk musicians such as Bert Jansch and John Martyn, the pair performed acoustic guitar-based sets in local folk clubs, drawing on these artists' introspective and innovative styles.[8] By 1968, they were performing in local folk clubs, and in 1969, they established a residency at the Beckenham Arts Lab, where they refined their sound.The duo began expanding shortly after formation, recruiting Colin Pearson on violin in 1967, followed by other members including Andy Hellaby on bass and drums by 1969, during their involvement with the Beckenham Arts Lab.[1] Rob Young joined on flute, oboe, and hand drums, replacing an earlier member, while 16-year-old Bobbie Watson was added on vocals and percussion after the group heard her harmonizing at a shared house on Perth Road.[1] This sextet lineup honed their sound through rehearsals, blending acoustic folk with emerging experimental elements like dissonant strings and unconventional rhythms.The band's name, "Comus," was suggested by acquaintance Chris Youle and derived from John Milton's 1634 masque Comus, a mythological tale involving enchantment and moral temptation, which aligned with the members' fascination with classical mythology and the occult.[1] Early performances took place in London's vibrant underground scene, including gigs at the Beckenham Arts Lab and on the college circuit, where they showcased their pastoral yet eerie acoustic folk arrangements to receptive audiences in the countercultural milieu.[1] These outings laid the groundwork for their progression toward original songwriting that would culminate in the material for First Utterance.[1]
Album development
The songwriting for First Utterance was primarily handled by vocalist and guitarist Roger Wootton and guitarist Glenn Goring between the late 1960s and 1970, drawing from their shared influences in British acoustic folk while incorporating increasingly experimental and ominous structures. Wootton, inspired by John Milton's masque Comus, crafted lyrics centered on dark mythological and psychological motifs, which Goring complemented with intricate guitar arrangements that blended pastoral fingerpicking with dissonant, eerie progressions. This collaborative process evolved organically during the band's early formation at Ravensbourne College of Art, where the duo first met, transitioning from lighter folk roots toward a more confrontational sound that defied conventional song forms.[7][8]Key tracks such as "The Herald" and "Drip Drip" emerged through intensive live rehearsals and improvisational jamming sessions, which allowed the band to refine their material amid the communal living setup in a rented house in Beckenham. "The Herald," co-written by Wootton and Goring, featured wistful, mythical lyrics set against Goring's extended guitar solo, developed in response to bassist Andy Hellaby's innovative slide techniques during practices. Similarly, "Drip Drip" took shape as a psycho-horror narrative influenced by contemporary films, with violinist Colin Pearson's glissandos adding to its sadistic tension; the song's structure incorporated spontaneous elements from group improvisation, fostering a thematic unity around pagan rituals, demonic possession, and visceral horror that permeated the album's concept. These rehearsals, often held in informal settings like the Beckenham Arts Lab, emphasized live energy and helped solidify the band's rejection of polished folk traditions in favor of raw, unsettling dynamics.[8][7]The band secured a recording deal with Dawn Records, the progressive rock imprint of Pye Records, in June 1970, following a series of demo recordings and high-profile gigs that showcased their evolving material. Manager Chris Youle negotiated the contract after Comus performed at the prestigious Purcell Room in London, building on earlier demo sessions that had initially attracted interest from RCA but led to their mid-process dismissal due to creative mismatches. "Diana," a mythology-inspired track written by Pearson in autumn 1970 and refined through band jamming, was selected as the lead single to highlight the album's pagan undertones and rhythmic intensity upon release.[1][8][7]Throughout this period, Comus faced significant challenges stemming from limited resources and internal shifts in their musical direction, which tested the band's cohesion as art students balancing creative ambitions with financial constraints. Operating on a shoestring budget without professionalmanagement initially, they relied on shared housing and occasional university gigs for sustenance, which constrained access to better instruments or rehearsal spaces. This era marked a deliberate pivot from their initial acoustic folk leanings—rooted in artists like Bert Jansch—toward a macabre aesthetic infused with horror and paganism, driven by Wootton's fascination with Milton's themes but complicated by lineup adjustments and the pressure to stand out in London's competitive scene.[7][8]
Musical style and themes
Genre influences
First Utterance exemplifies progressive folk music laced with psychedelic elements, rooted in the British folk revival of the late 1960s and early 1970s, as seen in contemporaries like Fairport Convention whose electric adaptations of traditional songs influenced Comus's acoustic-driven yet amplified approach.[4] The album also draws from avant-garde rock traditions, particularly the experimental intensity and slow-building structures of early King Crimson, blending intricate time signatures and dissonant textures to elevate folk forms beyond conventional boundaries.[9]Classical influences permeate the sound through the band's use of violin and flute—played by Colin Pearson and Rob Young, respectively—which weave haunting, contrapuntal lines that evoke Renaissance masques and create a pervasive sense of tension and foreboding, distinguishing it from lighter folk revival efforts.[10] These acoustic elements contrast with bursts of psychedelic distortion on electric guitars and chaotic vocal arrangements, fostering experimental song structures that shift abruptly between pastoral serenity and frenzied dissonance, as noted in the album's fusion of folk, rock, and avant-garde by music critics.[11][12]This combination positions First Utterance as a seminal precursor to the folk horror subgenre, where ominous instrumentation and ritualistic rhythms conjure a dark, pagan undercurrent in British music.[10] The work's progressive complexity shines in its extended compositions, such as "The Herald" (approximately 12 minutes) and "Drip Drip" (approximately 11 minutes), which layer intimate acoustic passages with sprawling, multi-sectional developments to achieve a uniquely immersive depth.[9][13]
Lyrical content
The lyrics of First Utterance center on predominant themes of paganism, nature's violence, and macabre horror, heavily inspired by mythological sources such as John Milton's 1634 masque Comus, which depicts the pagan god of revelry luring victims into debauchery and chaos.[7][14] The band's name itself derives from this figure, a son of Circe and Dionysus in Greek mythology, symbolizing anarchy and nocturnal rites, which permeates the album's exploration of sorcery, lust, madness, and death.[7][15] Environmental dread underscores these motifs, with natural landscapes like dark forests transformed into sites of predation and burial, evoking a primal, uncontrollable ferocity in the wilderness.[14][16]Specific tracks highlight recurring motifs through vivid, poetic imagery that blends the archaic with the grotesque. In "Drip Drip," decay and madness dominate, as the narrator recounts a bloody murder followed by necrophilic and cannibalistic acts, with lines like dripping blood from a severed head symbolizing irreversible moral and physical rot in a forest grave.[14][16] "Song to Comus" employs ritualistic invocation, portraying the god's bewitching of a maiden through incantatory verses that summon chaotic revelry and assault, using surreal metaphors of shadowy woods and enchanted goblets to heighten the sense of inevitable doom.[16][15] These elements draw on Milton's themes of temptation and virtue's peril but twist them into unrelenting horror, prioritizing visceral dread over moral resolution.[7]Roger Wootton's vocals propel these narrative-driven lyrics, shifting from haunting, folk-inflected warbles to frenzied shrieks and theatrical howls that infuse the words with surreal unease, starkly contrasting the serene traditions of British folk music.[14][17] His delivery amplifies the lyrics' psychological intensity, turning personal tales of violence and insanity into immersive, almost incantatory experiences that unsettle the listener.[7]The album unfolds a cohesive narrative arc, beginning with the predatory pursuit in "Diana"—a frantic hunt through moonlit woodlands by hounds and shadowy figures—and escalating to a collective descent into chaos across subsequent tracks, encompassing mutilation, execution, and institutional torment.[16][14] This progression mirrors 1970s countercultural anxieties, rejecting hippie optimism for raw examinations of societal decay, oppression, and the psyche's darker impulses amid post-1960s disillusionment.[15][17]
Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for First Utterance took place over approximately one month from November to December 1970 at Pye Studios in Marble Arch, London.[18][2] This marked Comus's first complete full-length studio album experience, following an aborted attempt with RCA earlier that year when the label dropped the band midway through sessions due to creative mismatches.[8]The band aimed to capture their raw live energy in the studio, employing minimal overdubs to preserve the acoustic folk-prog intensity of their performances. Backing tracks were recorded live onto an 8-track machine, which introduced challenges like audio spill between instruments and required careful bouncing down, but this approach maintained the unpolished, organic feel central to their sound.[8]Adapting their primarily acoustic setup to the studio environment proved difficult, particularly under the constraints of producer Barry Murray, who was more accustomed to pop acts like Mungo Jerry and struggled with the band's unconventional style lacking drums and relying on visual cues among members.[8]The sessions wrapped up just in time for the album's February 1971 release on Dawn Records, with the track "Diana"—written by violinist Colin Pearson—receiving particular attention as it was selected for release as the lead single.[19][8]
Technical personnel
The production of First Utterance was overseen by Barry Murray, a producer affiliated with Pye Records and its progressive imprint Dawn, who had recently worked on Mungo Jerry's hit "In the Summertime."[20]Murray adopted a hands-off approach, allowing the band to pursue their experimental sound without significant interference, as he was unaccustomed to producing groups lacking a conventional drummer and rhythm section.[21]Recording and mixing duties were handled by engineer Geoff Calver at Pye Studios in London, where the sessions utilized 8-track technology to capture the band's live performances with minimal overdubs.[21] Calver emphasized the natural acoustic qualities of the instruments, incorporating subtle effects to enhance the album's eerie, organic atmosphere while navigating challenges like timing inconsistencies from the lack of a conventional drum kit.[21]The album featured no external session musicians, with all instrumentation and primary performances delivered by the core band members.[3] Bobbie Watson provided backing and lead vocals, her ethereal contributions serving as a counterpoint to the band's darker tones.[20]
Artwork and release
Cover design
The front cover of First Utterance features a ballpoint pendrawing created by band member Roger Wootton, portraying a nude woman positioned amid a dense forest setting.[3] This imagery evokes a sense of vulnerability through the figure's exposed form and the encroaching wilderness, while suggesting elements of pagan ritual in its ritualistic pose and natural enclosure.[20] Wootton, an art student at the time, drew the piece himself, drawing from influences like the surreal and distorted styles of Gerald Scarfe and M.C. Escher to craft its eerie, hand-rendered quality.[22]The inner gatefold presents a painting by guitarist Glenn Goring, consisting of abstract and nightmarish scenes that blend distorted pastoral elements with ominous undertones.[23] These visuals depict twisted natural forms and shadowy figures, reinforcing motifs of horror intertwined with the untamed environment.[20]Overall, the artwork embodies the album's dark folk aesthetic through minimalist design choices, including stark black-and-white reproduction for the front cover and subdued coloring for the gatefold, paired with simple sans-seriftypography for the title and band name.[3] Notably, the absence of any band photograph contributes to an aura of anonymity and enigma, allowing the symbolic imagery to dominate.[9] The recurring forest and female figure serve as core symbols in the "folk horror" visual tradition, shaping the album's enduring perception as a cornerstone of eerie, nature-infused psychedelia.[24] This artistic approach aligns briefly with the record's lyrical exploration of vulnerability amid primal forces.[25]
Commercial release
First Utterance was commercially released on 19 February 1971 by the independent label Dawn Records, under catalog number DNLS 3019, in the format of a vinyl LP album with a gatefold sleeve containing a lyrics insert.[18][26]The album's lead single, a maxi-single featuring "Diana", "In the Lost Queen's Eyes", and "Winter Is a Coloured Bird", was issued on 5 February 1971 on Dawn Records (catalog DNX 2506) as a 7-inch vinyl at 33 RPM, but its promotion faced significant challenges due to a nationwide UK postal strike that delayed the delivery of promotional copies to media outlets and reviewers.[19][17][27]Initial sales of the album were limited, with poor commercial performance largely attributed to its niche progressive folk style, inadequate distribution from the small label, and the promotional disruptions, leading to widespread frustration among band members and ultimately contributing to the group's dissolution in 1972.[28][29] The record achieved no significant chart success and was mainly available through independent record shops and direct sales at Comus's live performances.[9]
Critical reception
Initial reviews
Upon its release in 1971, First Utterance received positive but sparse coverage in the UK music press. The New Musical Express (NME) gave the album a generous review.[17]Time Out similarly offered a generous review.[17]However, the album's exposure was hampered by a UK postal strike that delayed the delivery of review copies to journalists and retailers, limiting broader critical attention.[9]Several reviewers noted the work's challenging nature, deeming it inaccessible for mainstream audiences due to its dark themes and unconventional structures.[17]In sum, First Utterance was regarded as an innovative yet niche effort, which aligned with its modest commercial performance and the band's subsequent dissolution by 1972.[17]
Following its initial obscurity, First Utterance experienced a significant rediscovery in the 1990s among record collectors and enthusiasts of obscure progressive and folk music, which elevated it to cult status.[30] This resurgence was fueled by growing interest in underground 1970s recordings, with the album's rarity on vinyl contributing to its mystique among aficionados.[14]The album has since garnered high critical rankings in retrospective lists. In 2014, FACT magazine placed First Utterance at number 22 on its list of the 100 best albums of the 1970s, praising its innovative blend of folk and progressive elements.[31] Earlier, in 1998, The Wire included it in its list of 100 overlooked records that "set the world on fire while no one was looking."[32]Modern reviews have positioned First Utterance as a pioneering work in "folk horror," a subgenre characterized by eerie, pastoral narratives infused with dread. Prog Archives reviewers have noted its substantial influence on 1970s progressive music, crediting the album's unconventional structures and dark thematic undercurrents for inspiring later experimental acts.[9]Critics consistently praise the album's atmospheric tension and singular uniqueness, often describing its haunting violin lines, dissonant harmonies, and ritualistic rhythms as creating an immersive, otherworldly experience. AllMusic characterized it as containing an "imaginative if elusive brand of experimental folk-rock, with a tense and sometimes distressed vibe."[2] However, Roger Wootton's vocal delivery—marked by its high-pitched, falsetto style—remains a point of contention, with some reviewers acknowledging its polarizing effect amid the otherwise acclaimed sonic innovation.[9] A 2024 review in The Daily Campus highlighted the album's intense imagery and unique sound, underscoring its enduring appeal.[33]
Album content
Track listing
First Utterance was released on vinyl as a double-sided LP in 1971, featuring seven tracks with no bonus material, and a total runtime of approximately 42 minutes.[18] Durations may vary slightly across pressings and reissues due to mastering differences.[18][2][9]The track listing, including durations and writer credits, is presented below.[18]
The musicians on First Utterance consist of the core Comus lineup, who handled all performances across the album's tracks with no guest contributors.[18]
These roles reflect the band's collaborative approach to the recordings, emphasizing acoustic and folk elements alongside experimental textures.[18]
Legacy
Reissues and remasters
Following its initial release, First Utterance has been reissued in various formats, often with remastering to improve audio fidelity from the original analog tapes, highlighting the album's intricate acoustic arrangements, including the prominent flute and violin elements.[3]A notable early remaster appeared in 1995 from BGO Records, which produced a CD edition emphasizing clearer separation in the folk-prog instrumentation.[35]In 2005, Breathless Records, in partnership with Sanctuary Records, released a digipak CD reissue that included three bonus tracks from the original "Diana" single: "Diana (Single Version)," "In the Lost Queen's Eye," and "Winter Is a Coloured Bird."[36]The 2010 deluxe vinyl edition by Rise Above Records featured a gatefoldLP pressed in limited colored variants for collectors.[37]Music on Vinyl issued 180-gram audiophilevinyl repressions in the 2020s, starting with a 2017 limited numbered edition on silver vinyl and followed by a 2024 crystal clear variant, both including an insert with lyrics and artwork restoration.[38]Esoteric Recordings' 2018 remastered and expanded CD edition drew directly from the original analog tapes for enhanced dynamic range and detail, particularly in the flute and violin textures; it added the maxi-single version of "Diana," "In the Lost Queen's Eye," "Winter Is a Coloured Bird," plus the previously unreleased "All the Colours of Darkness" (recorded in 1971), accompanied by expanded liner notes with historical context and photos.[39] Esoteric reissued this expanded edition in 2025.[40] In July 2025, Belle Antique released a Japanese SHM-CD remaster in a paper sleeve format.[41]
Cultural influence
Following its initial obscurity, First Utterance garnered a dedicated cult following during the 1990s psych-folk revival, particularly within neofolk and occult music circles. The influential neofolk act Current 93 covered the track "Diana" as the opening song on their 1997 album Horsey, reinterpreting it with looping elements from the original to emphasize its haunting, ritualistic quality.[42]The album's impact extended to progressive and metal genres, notably influencing Opeth frontman Mikael Åkerfeldt, who has repeatedly hailed First Utterance as a masterpiece and drew the title for his band's 1998 debut album My Arms, Your Hearse from one of its songs.[34] Åkerfeldt's endorsement helped introduce Comus to broader prog audiences, underscoring the record's role in bridging folk experimentation with heavier, atmospheric sounds.First Utterance's blend of pagan imagery, dissonance, and pastoral dread has shaped the folk-horror genre's sonic palette, paralleling the eerie folk elements in 1970s British films like The Wicker Man.[25] Its macabre tone and themes of sorcery and violation prefigure the unsettling acoustics often used in modern folk-horror soundtracks and media.As the most acclaimed and enduring release from the Dawn label, First Utterance is widely regarded for pioneering a darker strain of progressive folk that diverged from mainstream 1970s trends.[22] This legacy positioned it as a touchstone in the occult folk and hauntology movements of the 2000s, where archival explorations revived interest in forgotten British experimental folk, amplifying its resonance in underground scenes.[9]