History
The album would be the last studio he would make before his death in 2000 of colorectal cancer. It was his first studio album for six years following The Bus Driver's Prayer & Other Stories in 1992 and his first studio album with The Blockheads for 18 years since Laughter in 1980 (though they had produced a live album Warts 'n' Audience in 1991) and is considered by many to be the true successor to his 1977 album New Boots and Panties!! - on his BBC documentary Dury dismissed all of the albums between Do It Yourself and Mr. Love Pants as inferior.
The album took around five years to complete and the writing commenced at Acre Farm, Twyford (near Reading, Berkshire) in 1993. Initially Chas Jankel worked with Ian Dury after returning from living in America for most of the eighties, but arguments between the two and soundman Ian Horne lead to Jankel leaving, at least two songs "Itinerant Child" and "Bed O' Roses No. 9" were written before he did however. Deserted Dury called Merlin Rhys-Jones who had been in the Music Students (Ian Dury's band for the album 4,000 Weeks' Holiday) they wrote ten songs together there, two would eventually make the album - "Jack Shit George" and "Cacka Boom" before arguments over money caused Rhys-Jones to leave.
It is generally considered that Ian Dury's first bout with cancer is what prompted him to reform The Blockheads and work with them solely, which he would do for the rest of his life. Ian Dury's new minder Derek Hussey a.k.a. Derek the Draw who managed to get Jankel and Dury talking again only for a bizarre phonecall from Ian involving touring America and a fictitious uncle of Jankel's lead to Chas having his solicitor write to Dury and Mickey Gallagher saying he would never play with the band again, though he relented after discovering Dury had cancer.
The album was recorded at Air Studios, which was also being used by Michael Jackson and was surprisingly trouble free compared to the troublesome recording sessions usually caused by Ian Dury, again his personality changes are attributed to his first bout with cancer - the only major incident being Dury randomly deciding to replace new drummer Steve Monti with Bernard Purdie but after constant opposition from his band Dury relented.
"Itinerant Child" was to be released as Ian Dury & The Blockhead's first single in 18 years (since 1980's "Sueperman's Big Sister") and a video was recorded but East Central One nixed the idea, in the end "Mash it Up Harry" was released instead on both CD and 12" record. The album is named after a song written by a friend of Steve Monti called Dean, Dean was furious and thought that the band had stolen his song.
Read more about this topic: Mr. Love Pants
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