Share:

Leslie Winer When I Hit You - You'll Feel It 2LP (Black Vinyl)

Leslie Winer

$36.99
 
Availability: Discontinued
In Stock An In Stock item is available to ship normally within 24 business hours.
Preorder A Preorder is an item that has not yet been released. Typically the label will set a projected release date (that is subject to change). If a projected release date is known, we will include this in the description in red. Other Preorders are set to release 'TBA.' This means that release date is yet 'To Be Announced'. The Preorder can be released anywhere between weeks, months or years from its initial announcement.
Backordered An Out Of Stock item is an item that we normally have available to ship but we are temporarily out of. We do not have a specific date when it will be coming.
Awaiting Repress Awaiting repress titles are in the process of being repressed by the label. No ETA is available at this time.
Expected On When an item is Out Of Stock and we have an estimated date when our stock should arrive, we list that date on our website in the part's description. It is not guaranteed.
Special Order A Special Order item is an item that we do not stock but can order from the manufacturer. Typical order times are located within the product description.
 
SKU:
LIALP181
UPC:
826853018111

Coming July 30, 2021 pre-order your copy today! Orders with both pre-order and in stock items will have all in stock items shipped immediately!

Definitive Career-Spanning Anthology Newly Remastered On 2LP!
Previously Unreleased Tracks, Inspired Collabs & Material From Groundbreaking 1990 Solo Debut 'Witch'!

Light in the Attic is ecstatic to announce When I Hit You - You'll Feel It: a 16-track anthology that celebrates the extraordinary work of musician, poet, and author, Leslie Winer. When I Hit You - You'll Feel It spans Winer's three-decade-long musical career: from her groundbreaking solo work in the early '90s to her latest inspired projects. Featuring musical contributions from Jon Hassell, Helen Terry, Jah Wobble, Renegade Soundwave's Karl Bonnie, and others, the collection also spotlights Winer's diverse collaborations, and unearths previously-unreleased recordings.

Newly remastered by the GRAMMY®-nominated engineer John Baldwin, When I Hit You - You'll Feel It includes a new interview with Winer, captured by the compilation's co-producer, acclaimed author and critic Wyndham Wallace. Rounding out the package is an insightful essay by the award-winning writer and scholar Louis Chude-Sokei and an original cover collage by the renowned British photographer and artist, Linder, featuring photography by Mondino, and design by designer Christopher Shannon.

More about Leslie Winer....

Musician, poet, iconoclast, model, artist, enigma. Leslie Winer is many things.

Born to a teenage mother and sold for $10,000 in a black market adoption when she was just hours old, Winer has always lived an uncommon life. She grew up in Boston with a voracious appetite for music and the written word and embraced the city's lively jazz and folk scene in the '70s. Moving to New York for art school, she gravitated towards a vibrant crowd of intellectuals, artists, and radical thinkers - or perhaps they gravitated towards her.

There, Winer formed an unlikely friendship with writer and artist William S. Burroughs and lived on-and-off with Jean-Michel Basquiat. In London, where Winer began her musical ventures in earnest, she was a regular at Leigh Bowery's underground club Taboo, where she met many of her collaborators, including filmmaker John Maybury, Kevin Mooney (of Adam and the Ants), and Boy George, who once declared that Winer "might just be the coolest woman on the planet!"

Winer's striking looks also attracted fashion designers and photographers. Throughout the early '80s, she was an in-demand model - appearing in campaigns for Valentino, Christian Dior, and Yohji Yamamoto, and serving as a muse for a young Jean-Paul Gaultier, who later dubbed Winer "the first androgynous model." She posed for Helmut Newton, Irving Penn, and Pierre et Gilles, and graced the covers of The Face, French and Italian editions of Vogue, and Mademoiselle.

But music was Winer's true passion and, at the turn of the '90s, she would unknowingly help invent the massively popular genre known today as trip-hop.

On her debut, Witch, Winer masterfully blended the uninhibited sampling of early hip-hop with dancehall basslines and programmed beats, while weaving mesmerizing - and coolly-detached - spoken-word vocals into her ambient tracks. It was unorthodox in the most delicious ways.

The album was a bold experiment by the self-taught artist, who enlisted a number of talented musicians in the sessions, including Culture Club's Helen Terry, Karl Bonnie of Renegade Soundwave, former Public Image Ltd. bassist Jah Wobble, and Kevin Mooney, as well as Marco Pirroni and Matthew Ashman (both of Adam and the Ants, among other acts).

While Witch was finished in 1990, it wouldn't be released for three years, due to the whims of Winer's label. In the meantime, several tracks made their way out into the world as early as June 1990, thanks to BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel, who later referred to Witch as "the definition of a hidden gem."

Opening with the laid-back dub beats and soft, sing-songy chorus of "He Was", Witch features such highlights as the up-tempo "Skin", the hypnotic, bass-heavy "The Boy Who Used 2 Whistle", and the album's closer, "Dream 1", in which waves of reverb-soaked vocals bounce from one ear the other.

While sonically, Winer was breaking new ground, she was also bringing a fresh, incendiary take on what it means to be a woman in the music business, as embodied by her composition "N1 Ear", in which she delivers a scorching, feminist manifesto, borrowed from the Women's Liberation Broadsheet.

Winer had every right to vent her frustrations as a woman in music. Despite her fierce demeanor and steadfast focus, she was consistently disregarded and typecast by the industry. Many of her early collaborators failed to credit her work, while others simply overlooked her influence. Witch, for example, was so delayed that by the time the album saw the light of day (released under the pseudonym "©"), trip-hop was gaining mainstream traction via acts like Portishead, Massive Attack and Madonna. Although Winer eventually gained wider acknowledgment (prompting the NME to give her the dubious distinction of "The Grandmother of Trip-Hop"), Witch initially went sorely unnoticed.

Following the disappearance of Witch, Winer continued to record, undeterred by the elusive nature of mainstream success in the modern music business. Her network of inspired collaborators continued to grow and expand, yet her influence remained largely a secret except to those in the know, such as Grace Jones and Sinead O'Connor, who would cover her songs.

Today, Winer stays busy on new musical projects in the French countryside, where she has spent the past two decades raising her five daughters. A prolific writer, she has also published two collections of poetry and oversees the literary estate of Herbert Huncke, a defining member of the Beat Generation.

In the modern era, one is hard-pressed to find an artist who continues to push the creative envelope as much as Winer does. And yet, three decades after her revolutionary debut, her work remains just as startling and fresh.

Winer's influence might best be summed by the award-winning composer Max Richter, who offered the following thoughts to Wyndham Wallace for his extensive liner notes: "The world seems finally to be catching up to Leslie Winer, whose startling intelligence and singular vision shine through her copious recording life. A visionary commentator on the relationship between individuals and society in the mould of Blake or Woolf, Leslie Winer knows things that the culture at large just doesn't understand yet, and she has never been afraid to let us know that."

The definition of a hidden gem
-John Peel
The world seems finally to be catching up to Leslie Winer, whose startling intelligence and singular vision shine through her copious recording life.
-Max Richter
She might just be the coolest woman on the planet!
-Boy George


Features

  • Black Vinyl
  • Double LP
  • Previously unreleased tracks, inspired collaborations & material from Leslie's groundbreaking 1990 solo debut, Witch
  • Musical contributions from Jon Hassell, Helen Terry, Jah Wobble, Karl Bonnie, Christophe Van Huffel, Jay Glass Dubs, Mari G. Mooney, Diamond Version & More
  • Newly remastered by the GRAMMY®-nominated engineer John Baldwin
  • 24-page booklet with a new, extensive interview with Leslie
  • Liner notes by acclaimed author, critic & compilation co-producer Wyndham Wallace
  • Essay by award-winning writer & scholar Louis Chude-Sokei
  • Cover collage by renowned British artist Linder
  • Photography by Mondino
  • Design by Christopher Shannon

Selections

  1. When I Was Walt Whitman - Leslie Winer
  2. N1 Ear - Leslie Winer
  3. Tree - Leslie Winer
  4. Personals - Jon Hassell and Bluescreen featuring Leslie
  5. Dream 1 - Leslie Winer
  6. Dunderhead - Purity Supreme
  7. The Boy Who Used 2 Whistle - Leslie Winer
  8. Hold On Postcards - Leslie Winer
  9. He Was - Leslie Winer
  10. RoundUp Ready - Leslie Winer
  11. Skin - Leslie Winer
  12. Box - Leslie Winer
  13. This Blank Action - Diamond Version featuring Leslie Winer
  14. Battle Porn - Leslie Winer
  15. Woodshedded - Leslie Winer & Jay Glass Dubs
  16. Fragment #2 - Leslie Winer & Mari G. Mooney

Customers Also Like