This Leaden Pall | ||||
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Studio album by Half Man Half Biscuit | ||||
Released | 25 October 1993 | |||
Recorded | Bus Stop Studios, Liverpool | |||
Genre | Indie rock | |||
Length | 53:14 | |||
Label | Probe Plus Probe 36 | |||
Producer | Half Man Half Biscuit and Geoff Davies | |||
Half Man Half Biscuit chronology | ||||
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This Leaden Pall is the fourth album by UK rock band Half Man Half Biscuit, released in 1993.
The album cover features a bleak overdeveloped picture of the now demolished Hale Wood pub in Halewood, Merseyside. In 2001 it was voted the 93rd best LP sleeve of all time in Q magazine.
Anecdotally, lead singer Nigel Blackwell has referred to the album as their Closer.
At the time of its release, NME writer Johnny Cigarettes gave the album a 6/10 review, describing "Running Order Squabble Fest" as "a mini-epic of Spinal Tap proportions" and Blackwell as "the only rival to Vic Reeves in making cultural ephemera unfeasibly funny". The same publication revisited the album in 1999, with John Robinson stating that it "understood just as much as OK Computer the bravery needed to accomplish modern living".