CLUTCHING AT STRAWS
RELEASED 22 JUNE 1987
 
 
 
 
Marillion's 4th Studio Album, Clutching At Straws is a single album & was released on 22nd June 1987.

This album was remastered in 1999 and a deluxe edition was released in 2018.

Current & Notable Release Versions:

1CD Remixed Version (2019): 2018 Remaster of the album as included on the deluxe edition. Features a brand new stereo remix of the album by Andy Bradfield and Avril Mackintosh. Standard Jewel case with CD booklet featuring lyrics & original album art.

Vinyl Version (2019): 2018 Remaster of the album as included on the vinyl deluxe edition. Features a brand new stereo remix of the album by Andy Bradfield and Avril Mackintosh

4 CD / 1 BR Deluxe Edition (2018): features a brand new stereo remix of the album by Andy Bradfield & Avril Mackintosh. Also includes the December 19th, 1987 concert at The Edinburgh Playhouse, remixed by Michael Hunter and the demos from the 1999 EMI remaster, along with four previously unreleased demos of Clutching material.

The blu-ray contains 48/24 audio of the remix of the album in stereo and 5.1. Also included are the promo videos for the album’s singles, The Final Straw (a new documentary about the album), the original 1987 album mix and bonus tracks. OUT OF PRINT.

4 LP Deluxe Vinyl Edition (2018): features a brand new stereo remix of the album by Andy Bradfield & Avril Mackintosh. Also includes the December 19th, 1987 concert at The Edinburgh Playhouse, remixed by Michael Hunter. OUT OF PRINT.
 
Download Version: Audio download not available from Racket Records.
 

 
 
See below for a complete track listing & lyrics for the main version of this album
 
DELUXE CD/BLURAY BOX SET
 
TRACKLIST

DISC 1 (2018 ANDY BRADFIELD & AVRIL MACKINTOSH REMIX) 
Hotel HobbiesLYRICS
Warm Wet CirclesLYRICS
That Time of the Night (The Short Straw)LYRICS
Going Under (Alternate Version)LYRICS
Just for the RecordLYRICS
White RussianLYRICS
IncommunicadoLYRICS
Torch SongLYRICS
Slainte MhathLYRICS
Sugar MiceLYRICS
The Last StrawLYRICS
Happy Ending?NO LYRICS
DISC 2 - LIVE AT EDINBURGH PLAYHOUSE 1987 (MICHAEL HUNTER MIX) 
Intro - La Gazza LadraNO LYRICS
Slainte MhathLYRICS
AssassingLYRICS
White RussianLYRICS
IncubusLYRICS
Sugar MiceLYRICS
FugaziLYRICS
Hotel HobbiesLYRICS
Warm Wet CirclesLYRICS
That Time of the Night (The Short Straw)LYRICS
DISC 3 - LIVE AT EDINBURGH PLAYHOUSE 1987 (MICHAEL HUNTER MIX) 
Pseudo Silk KimonoLYRICS
KayleighLYRICS
LavenderLYRICS
Bitter SuiteLYRICS
Heart of LothianLYRICS
The Last StrawLYRICS
IncommunicadoLYRICS
Garden PartyLYRICS
Market Square HeroesLYRICS
DISC 4 - DEMOS & EXTRAS 
Beaujolais DayLYRICS
Story from a Thin WallLYRICS
Shadows on the BarleyLYRICS
Exile on Princes StreetLYRICS
Sunset HillLYRICS
Tic-Tac-ToeLYRICS
Voice in the CrowdLYRICS
White Russians (Demo)LYRICS
Sugar Mice in the RainNO LYRICS
Hotel Hobbies / Warm Wet Circles (Mosaic Demos)NO LYRICS
Just for the RecordLYRICS
Torch SongLYRICS
Slainte MhathLYRICS
BLU-RAY DISC 
48/24 PCM Stereo RemixNO LYRICS
48/24 LPCM Master Audio 5.1 MixNO LYRICS
48/24 DTS Master Audio 5.1 MixNO LYRICS
Documentary - The Final StrawNO LYRICS
Incommunicado (Video)NO LYRICS
Sugar Mice (Video)NO LYRICS
Warm Wet Circles (Video)NO LYRICS
Clutching At Straws (1987 Album Mix)NO LYRICS
Incommunicado (Alternate Version)NO LYRICS
Tux OnLYRICS
Going Under (Extended Version)LYRICS
 
 
AVAILABLE VERSIONS FOR CLUTCHING AT STRAWS
 
Deluxe CD/Bluray Box Set
Clutching At Straws Deluxe CD/Bluray Box Set
Our Price: £50.00
BUY WITH CREDITS: 50
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2LP 2018 Vinyl Remix
Clutching At Straws 2LP 2018 Vinyl Remix
Our Price: £31.99
BUY WITH CREDITS: 32
LOW STOCK
 
Vinyl Deluxe Set 5LP
Clutching At Straws Vinyl Deluxe Set 5LP
Our Price: £59.99
BUY WITH CREDITS: 60
OUT OF STOCK
 
 
 
OTHER / RELATED ITEMS FOR CLUTCHING AT STRAWS
 
RELATED CDs
2CD Remastered Version
Clutching At Straws 2CD Remastered Version
Our Price: £9.99
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2018 Remix 1CD
Clutching At Straws Album 2018 Remix 1CD
Our Price: £12.99
BUY WITH CREDITS: 13
IN STOCK
 
 
 
QUOTES AND TRIVIA
 
IAN MOSLEY

In some respects, the making of this album followed the familiar path inherent in any creative project. Months of writing, recording and mixing songs, in a collaborative effort alongside bandmates who become temporarily, if not forever, intertwined in each other's lives. The ups and downs included bursts of laughter, practical jokes, flashes of genius; as well as moments of silence, hours of pub-crawling, days of dedicated work and as expected, the predictable disagreements that either fuelled the projects' process or brought it to a screeching halt.

It was 1987, and if the 80's were defined by women, drugs and booze, 'Clutching At Straws' represented last call. The final round served up amidst good cheer and familiar faces before the lights were thrown on, drawing not only the evening but the era to a close.
 
Without a massive upheaval or deafening explosion 'Clutching At Straws' quietly ushered in our final album with Fish at the helm. The album reflects our past successes, mutual respects and genuine camaraderie experienced as bandmates, yet exposed the decaying tethers that held us together. The tracks offer subtle as well as obvious references to excessive antics. Antics and abuses that ultimately (if not intentionally), forced the band to regroup, retreat and recognise the need for reformation.

Throughout production of this album I felt an increasing sense of anxiety regarding our future together. Marillion as a whole would surely survive, the music's powerful pull and unique sound is self-sustaining, but it's components would undergo a dreaded yet inevitable transition. After months of writing in various facilities, we finished the album and set off to record at Westside Studios and mix at Advision Studios. Recording and mixing an album can be a painstakingly tedious process, but my Marillion bandmates always managed to find something amusing with which to entertain themselves. Whether it was a scantily clad singing stripper to help celebrate a birthday, or a routine trip to the pub to stare at warm circles, we lived together for months like some kind of musical fraternity. Our days were filled with far more good times than bad.
 
I will be forever grateful to many of the professional people we worked with and particularly Nick Davies whose attention to detail and dedicated efforts significantly contributed to the success of this album.

But the album's success and worldwide tour alone were not enough to keep the group as we knew it then together. Marillion however would carry on with a new lead singer, Steve Hogarth, who subsequently joined the band.

We are constantly inspired by the support of our fans, and continue to enjoy reunions with all the bandmates. The magic and muscle behind Marillion's music is a mystery to many yet understood by masses.

See you at the next gig. Cheers.
 
 
MARK KELLY

The whole period surrounding Clutching at Straws is a bit vague for all five of us. I know Fish blames it on the ‘live fast, die young' lifestyle most of us were embracing at the time. I think it was also because the band was so busy coping with the success of Misplaced Childhood while trying to get our heads around writing a new album. There was also added pressure from the A&R department at EMI to come up with another song like Kayleigh. We knew that would never happen. The first time was a bloody accident anyway!
 
We began writing the music for CAS fairly informally in May ‘86 at Steve's house after we finished a North American tour opening for Rush. The first songs we worked on were Hotel Hobbies and Warm Wet Circles. Ian was playing his parts on a brand new electronic drum pad - a useful technological development as Ian's kit wouldn't have fitted in Steve's house or made him very popular with the neighbours. At the time I remember feeling frustrated at how slowly the songs were coming together. But when I look back it's not surprising given the composus interruptus that went on with us yo-yoing in and out of Europe to play the big open air festivals with Queen.

These summer shows culminated with our own headline gig at the Milton Keynes Bowl. We should have stopped there I suppose, on a high, but in typical style we agreed to play a charity gig called ‘Soap Aid'. We got to rub suds with a bunch of Brit soap stars in Wigan. In a rugby ground. In the mud. Loadsa fun. Fish stopped the band mid song in order to break up a fight in the audience - it was Deirdre and Ken I think - or was it Grant and Phil? I suppose it wasn't as bad as ‘Fife Aid' the following year. Rubbing sporrans. In Scotland. In more mud than I've ever seen. Even the bands were scrapping. Jack Bruce punched out one of the organisers for forgetting to take out the brown ‘M&M's' - rock & roll eh? We didn't know it at the time but it was to be our last gig with Fish.
 
Anyway, back to the summer of ‘86. To be honest the TV screen goes a bit wobbly here but I know we wrote some stuff (Just For The Record) at Nomis rehearsal studios in London, a place we used for tour rehearsals and sometimes writing. We also stored our equipment in a lockup in the basement.

The rent was more that you would pay for a flat in London. Looking back I can't understand what we saw in the place. In the early days we used to like the idea of rubbing shoulders with the likes of Boy George - good make-up tips, Kagagoogoo - inspiring hairdos, and Motorhead - the best drugs! - in the canteen but the place had no atmosphere and cost an arm and a leg to hire. If we were unlucky enough to be in the room next to Motorhead it was a pointless exercise. Have you ever tried to compose next door to a bunch of whizzed up, unwashed, leather clad loonies who sounded like they were laying the foundations for a great public building, not making music.
 
By autumn we'd had enough of traveling up and down to London and settled into a residential studio in Brighton called Stanbridge. My overriding memory of the time we spent here was sitting up all night in front of a computer screen playing a game called MUD. M.U.D. stands for Multi User Dungeon and enables a bunch of sad individuals to hack each other to bits with virtual broadswords without ever meeting, while running up extortionate phone bills. My other hobby at the time was drinking. One afternoon Fish and I hired Comic Strip's Supergrass movie and to make it more fun we cracked open a bottle of Jack Daniels; by the time the film was finished so was the JD. AA? What's that? No wonder all the songs were about drinking.
 
The months flew by and not a lot got written, or so it seemed. We took a break for Christmas and a few seasonal gigs. This gave us an opportunity to try out a few new songs. We played White Russian, Warm Wet Circles and Incommunicado. I think? We resumed in the New Year and finished the writing by the end of January. I don't know why but for some reason we decided to record at Westside Studios in London. More late nights and long drives home were the rule for the next 3 months. I remember producer Chris Kimsey was obsessed with the track Going Under and always insisted on working on it once it got past midnight. I think, as a band we must have spent more time on that song than any other! I know. you can't tell. There was some discussion about relegating this song to the bonus CD because it wasn't on the original vinyl version. For me it is very much a part of the album and represents a snapshot of what was going on at the time.
 
Although not all the material on the bonus disc is from the CAS period, this seemed the most appropriate place to put it. Beaujolais Day was written at Stanbridge during the writing for CAS but never got past this stage. We put the guitar solo to good use in Warm Wet Circles and the rest of the music ended up as Seasons End a few years later. Nothing got wasted back then except the band.

The rest of the unreleased songs on this disc were all written after we finished touring with CAS in ‘88. We spent a number of months meeting at Pete's house to write. By this time relations between Fish and the rest of the band had become a bit strained. On the days that Fish did decide to turn up he would usually stay long enough to have a cup of coffee and tell us the music we were working on was ‘shite' and then leave. To be fair, we were as complimentary about the lyrics he showed us. In an attempt to move things along a stage further we booked into a demo studio called Tone Deaf to record demos of the material we had so far. Story from a Thin Wall, Shadow on the Barley, Sunset Hill and Tic Tac Toe were all recorded at this time. We invited producer Bob Ezrin down to hear our efforts. He told us to go away and write some more! Fish made an appearance too. It was his second visit to the studio, the other time was to record the vocal tracks. David Munns, head of A&R at EMI also came down to check how the masterpiece was coming along; he filled his car with diesel by accident on the way home he was so worried.
 
At this point any sensible people would have said let's take a few months off and recharge our creative batteries. We didn't. Instead we went to Glenshee in Scotland and locked ourselves in a castle. There was nothing for miles around. No escape. We had to be together. We would get it written if it killed us. It was a big castle, we didn't see a lot of each other. Still, we managed another two songs, Exile on Princes Street and Voice in the Crowd before heading south and splitting up.
 
Listening now, I don't think these demos are as bad as they seemed at the time. Most of the music and lyrics have made it onto an album, just not the same album!

If you are already familiar with the words and music I hope you enjoy the way they turned out in a parallel universe.
 
 
FISH

In 1985 we went into Hyper-Space. Misplaced Childhood's success kept us on the road until the Summer of 86 and as the dates dwindled to a stop the realisation that we had to write and record a follow up crept in and the white panic of responsibility clawed away inside my stomach.
 
That entire era was a blur of traveling, performing and endless interviews combined with the excesses of a touring rock band with their first worldwide hit. I was wasted physically and spiritually at the end of that road. The band had been well tested on the recent tour in every conceivable way. Relationships had been strained to the limit as we all tried to escape the surreality of touring in our individual ways and find some private space to hide in. I didn't deal with it at all well and the availability of all manner of temptations proved too much for a hedonistic soul like my own.

All my experiences in the last 2 years had been on the road so I turned there to hitch a creative lift into the concept of the new album. I was wary of the title as were the others. A substandard album and we'd have written our own reviews. The concept was maybe too close to home and once again I had to tread carefully as the story of ‘Torch' drilled home as a badly disguised alter ego. A writer with ‘block' turning to the bottle once again for inspiration was very close to the truth. By this point in my life I'd fallen in love with Tamara, my future wife to be and was dealing with a relationship that was new and demanding as we both tried to deal with the endless touring. I couldn't find enough space for my own life and coping with responsibility wasn't my forte. The problem was that even though the tour had finished I couldn't .The excesses stayed on for the ride. This as you'd expect caused problems at home and in the band. I knew I was heading for the wall but I also knew that I wouldn't feel much when I hit it.
 
The first writing sessions are pretty much lost in the haze and I don't remember anything about Barwell Court apart from some wild nights. In the Summer we played some shows with Queen in Germany which not only retarded my rehabilitation but the close contact with Freddie and the boys even taught me some new methods of debauchery. We returned to Brey studios and the writing. I was positively glowing but not with enthusiasm for the work rather the pleasures of being in a Hotel on the Thames at Maidenhead for a while with the road crew. I remember one night after getting wasted in the nightclub next door, eating a full meal provided by a very stoned Moroccan chef at midnight, jumping in the river fully clothed and cutting my feet ragged on broken glass on the river bed, ingesting enough illicit substances to floor a large mammal and indulging in a full water battle in the bedrooms. I soaked the crew room and went to bed with a locked door and a smile. In the morning I was woken by a turning key before a bucket of iced water was thrown by a still pissed ‘Privet' Hedge the sound guy. The maid had allowed him his revenge. I got up with a raging hangover to a glorious day and decided to finish my sleep on the hotel owners boat moored at the bottom of the garden.

Just as the dreams were getting good another icy deluge hit me. It was the owner repaying me for the damaged rooms. He was still pissed as well.

Brey studios was also the home of Gerry Anderson the creator of ‘Thunderbirds' and ‘Terra Hawks', animated puppet shows that we'd all grown up with as kids. He still had the puppets and showed us around the store rooms. He was well impressed that we were fans and allowed us to use the ‘Thunderbird' characters photos as laminated passes and pseudonyms on the 87 tour. I was Scott Tracy. For those of us in the band and crew who were of the more decadent nature we also had another laminate. It was in Brey that the ‘Zelda club' was formed. Zelda was the witch on ‘Terrahawks' and was extremely wrinkled, old and ugly with white hair. You started to look like that after a few weeks in the ‘Zelda Club'. Only those willing to go the full distance were admitted. Andy Field, Privet and myself were founding members.
 
The Brey sessions were getting together as we demoed the material so far. There was a brilliant version of ‘Sugar Mice' recorded on 2 track which at one point during the proper recording we seriously considered using on the album. It was coming together but the strain between us all was causing deeper problems. This was the first time I would seriously consider leaving the band. By the Autumn we were holed up in a residential rehearsal room somewhere on the Brighton Road. It was hellish. An old farm with outbuildings one of which was a cottage for the crew and another a huge damp floor to ceiling carpeted cave which was the rehearsal room. This is where I remember most of the material coming together but not without a high degree of confrontation.
 
We'd all banned powders from the farm and were doing well with our limited amounts of alcohol until John Arnison, our manager arrived for a night out with the boys. After the usual arguments and sorting out all our problems, both existent and non-existent, into the early hours of the morning I headed for bed and spent the rest of the night staring at the ceiling unable to sleep and considering my options. I wanted to go. I wanted a life. I was so tired of the touring and felt trapped by the machine we'd created. It was ‘That Time of the Night', a lyric that still reads like my resignation statement.

Chris Kimsey had been nominated for producer again which after the success of Misplaced was an obvious move. He arrived with Hugh Stanley Clarke to hear the new material one night and we duly sat back and played him the meager scraps of the sessions so far. They were unimpressed until I suggested we play him the jam piece we reserved for playing when we came back pissed from the pub. Most of the others hated it as they felt it was too like the Who (which it was) and the opening lyrics ripped of the Stones ‘Sympathy for the Devil' (which they didn't). Grudgingly we played it live. Chris loved it and Hugh nominated it as a potential single. That was ‘Incommunicado'.
 
All the songs were drawn from inspiration on the road or from bars. ‘Sugar Mice' was born in a hotel room in Milwaukee after a bad phone call home to a very upset girlfriend. ‘Warm Wet Circles' was inspired during a visit to see my parents in North Berwick and spending a night watching the regulars at the Quarterdeck bar in the High Street. I could have been watching Derek Dick at 18 years old. ‘White Russian' was the epic on the album. While on tour in Austria I became aware of the growth of a new generation of Neo Nazis in Europe. We'd been there around the elections and an American DJ at one of the stations who was Jewish told me about the practices of some parties during the campaigns. He'd been told not to mention his feelings on air and had duly resigned. An afternoon spent in his company and walking around the Jewish quarter in Vienna led to the first of many beer mats and menus acting as impromptu lyric books throughout the tour.
 
Before the recording there was the statutory Christmas tour where we played a couple of the numbers live. I can remember the first performance of Russians and Incommunicado at Aylesbury Civic. I knew then by the reaction to the new material we had a great album.

The tour was booked before we even went into the studio in early ‘87. The pressure was tremendous and we still had to tidy up some of the songs. Westside Studios near White City in London was the designated residence of the Zelda Club and a more dangerous venue could not have been found, minutes from the West End and Hammersmith Odeon, a taxi ride from home and discreetly tucked away in the back streets. We took full advantage and the sessions were intense and riddled with outrageous over the top consummation of substances and 120 mile an hour table tennis games. I still have out takes which would make your blood run cold and would not be at all acceptable on a commercially released CD!

The ‘throne room' others will tell you about I'm sure but I still remember John Arnison totally off his head talking to himself and giggling insanely as we all sat in the control room listening to him on an open mike, laughing nervously at the man in charge of our careers.
 
‘Going Under' happened on a wild night when Chris suggested that Steve and I should just go in and jam around this motif that Steve had been playing with during the recording. We were still light on material. The lyric was made up on the spot and although some of it is a bit gobbledegook we decided to keep the guide rather than redo the vocal and lose the vibe. To this day I don't know how I managed to conjure that lyric and I firmly remember playing it back to Tammi after we'd recorded it. She said ‘What am I doing wrong?' ‘Slainte Mhath' (I had to get the spelling from someone back in Scotland) meaning ‘cheers' as a rough translation was the first hint of the return of my national awareness and I was in tears the first time I played it to my Father at home in our new house in Gerrards Cross. Tamara and I were now engaged to be married and had moved from the small house in Aylesbury to a far larger and more expensive house near Ian's. It was a big jump and only made after assurances from John Arnison that ‘87 would be bringing in enough revenue to cover the loans I was taking out. We sold the Aylesbury house but couldn't move into the Gerrard's Cross home for a few months. Our stuff was put in storage and Tamara and I stayed with Ian and his wife till the present owners moved out.
 
When we were recording I was still living out of boxes as we tried to get the house together. All this and the tension from delivering the album on time didn't help matters and my relationship at home was affecting my attitude in the band. It culminated at the mixing sessions at Advision Studios in the West End of London. It had become more dangerous and after Mark's Birthday party at a Soho restaurant a major fallout occurred when a disagreement on a mix led to Chris Kimsey openly criticising Steve's guitar playing. Everyone was wired and wasted and the explosion was glorious. I was screaming at Steve, trashed a Rubber plant and threw a whisky tumbler at him, narrowly missing his head as everyone else was locked in their own private bawling matches in the control room. Steve stormed out telling us all to go to hell. Pete drove home and managed to smash up his car near Wendover a fact that didn't arise until next day when there was a band meeting scheduled for my house.
 
Ian and I stared at each other over coffee and a smoke firmly believing that the band was over. It was the closest we had ever come to a split. Needs must and soon we were all back in the studio arguing over grace notes and vocal lines. I hated the atmosphere but the end result was justifying the friction. At the end of the day with an album in the can and a tour in the trucks we were ready for another slog. I was glad to be getting back to the real world! ‘Incommunicado' went Top 10 in May 87 and we were back on a roll. The tour kicked off in Poland, our first visit and the start of a life long love affair with the country (and it's vodka!).

The video for ‘Incommunicado' was everywhere and sometimes like the album subject matter it was a bit too real to laugh at! The sleeve had been taken from a photo shoot outside the Marquee club and was by far the worst we'd done so far in our careers. The ‘Angel' looked ‘stuck-on' and didn't bode well for the album cover which was a second choice as the band rejected the original idea which ended up as the inside back cover of the CD booklet. I still don't like the ‘Clutching' cover and will always prefer the glass design. The cover was shot in Colchester's Baker's Arms and was supposed to be the ‘Great bar in the sky' populated with various artists, writers and poets who had a reputation for ‘liking a wee dram!'. It looked crap and I hope when I finally toddle off the planet that there's better bar's where I'm going and no cardboard cut outs in the corner. Problem was not enough budget and not enough time for Mark Wilkinson to design the sleeve we all wanted. There wasn't the computer technology available then that would have made the job a relatively simple and effective exercise as it is now. It was too dark and the new logo added to the sleeve's lacklustre. Even a limited edition vinyl sleeve with the logo ‘raised' didn't add to the appeal of the worst Marillion sleeve which also in my opinion housed our best album to date.
 
The tour ground on remorselessly through the Summer stopping only after an astounding show at Lorelei in Germany to around 35,000 people for my Wedding on the 25th July in Haddington, Scotland. Ian and Privet were my ‘Best men' and the party was as expected of the Zelda club.
 
America was high on the list of priorities and although I was extremely pissed off I ‘volunteered' to go on my Honeymoon to take care of promo duties in Los Angeles. Tamara and I stayed at Rod Smallwood's house just at the back of the Rainbow Rooms off Sunset Strip. Rod was Iron Maiden's manager and our USA management consultant as well as a good friend and gave us his house and Mercedes Sports car to make up for the cancelled Honeymoon (not to keep BTW! He's not that generous!!!) Tamara and I had a great time, wasted at every opportunity as we delved into the LA Noir and waited on the promo call. It never came and Rod eventually told me the USA tour was postponed. Capitol Records didn't think the album was right for the US market. They passed soon after ‘Incommunicado' didn't achieve the desired effect at radio.
 
My wife and I were sent home after being turned down after offering to drive coast to coast in a Rent-a-Wreck, Kerouac style, dropping into radio stations on the way. Capitol didn't want the expense and refused to deal with hotels and expenses next time the band were in New York City even though ironically enough they were running a promo campaign around the single where fans could win an all expense weekend locked away in a 5 star hotel, all expenses paid after being picked up in a limo!!! That kind of summed up our relationship with Capitol!
 
A few weeks later I was back in the USA again holed up in California waiting on a tour to start. Dates were cancelled and we rehearsed and lounged about hotel rooms watching porn movies and getting trashed. The manager was arriving soon. I'd had enough. For all the drugs and booze flying around I did my gig. I never cancelled a show due to being out of it and went on stage in control and in charge. I expected no less from our manager but I personally felt the partying was intruding and affecting judgment. I had had enough. I approached the band and crew and after much discussion we decided to get rid of John and had set plans in motion that would place Andy Field in charge of the US tour while back in London lawyers and accountants were put on standby to deal with the fallout and the setup that would enable us to continue touring while we searched for a new manager. It wouldn't be hard to find one.
 
John arrived while I was in town and immediately sussed the situation. By the time I had returned John had talked to the rest and convinced them to give him another chance. This would be the beginning of the end for me as I knew my days were numbered. I either had to bow to John's authority and accept his decisions or leave. The rest of the tour was to be the worst in my living memory. I was alienated from the band by their decision and my cards were marked by the manager who now knew of my intentions and realised it was him or me. We were working for the management as far as I was concerned not the other way around. It could only get worse.
 
I dissolved myself in hotel bars and days off on the road were an excuse to get severely wasted. I hadn't seen my wife for months and my new marriage was in danger of collapsing as the tour raged on and Torch blazed away. The Clutching tour finally staggered top a halt in Italy. I'd fallen out with the band who'd lost trust in me as my escapes became more extreme. My voice finally gave out in Modena and I was advised to take a long break from touring or face losing my voice completely as my chords were ravaged by the stress and abuse from the previous 8 months on the road. The tour fell apart and I headed home to a relationship that was on the rocks with a head unfit to deal with the future. Tamara and I went on our first holiday to the Caribbean and spent 3 weeks scuba diving and drinking Rum punches. I had to come back to a unit I didn't really want to be part of and a lifestyle that was threatening to kill me.
 
We had to go straight into writing the next album. A Christmas tour had been booked and the record company were anxious for new product with an American bent in order to break the only territory that so far had eluded us. Clutching had held the ground but hadn't topped Misplaced. Everyone was nervous. The writing started badly as we divided up into 2 separate camps. Eventually I suggested a retreat to Scotland to a ‘castle', in fact a Victorian folly at Dalnaglar in the edge of the Highlands that had been suggested by Robbie the Pict, a new found friend and Scottish political activist.

As before all my experiences had been on the road and I needed something new to focus on. The return to Scotland all be it for a residential writing session gave it to me. The lyrics started to follow a more political lean with a distinctly Scottish nationalist tone. The band weren't happy and the plan to bring the band together in the retreat came unstuck. I'd planned to write a book with Mark Wilkinson about the artwork and John had set up a deal for publishing. I told him he had to deal with the band on this and left it to him to announce the project. He didn't and when the cover of the book arrived at the castle the results were as imagined. It was confrontation after confrontation and rather than bring us together again we separated. I was in the tower with the drugs and the crew while the band were downstairs with their stash, both parties slagging off the other.
 
We'd played a gig in June in the then East Berlin to 200,000 people but the final show was to be a remarkable disaster called Fife Aid near St Andrews. A Scottish Live Aid it was not and the promise of World Wide TV coverage disappeared as fast as the Mixing towers in the sea fog that rushed in when the rain stopped pouring. The bill was wonderful and I've met so many musicians who were there and remember the shambles on the day. Bjork was there with the Sugar Cubes, Van Morrisson, John Martyn, Steve Hackett, Tam White, Phil Manzanera with John Wetton and many more respected musos. Our gig was tired and angry and the hotel apres show was a cauldron of hate as everyone blamed me for the decision to play. I can remember talking to Jackie Leven on the day asking him what I should do. I wanted to leave so badly. He agreed with me.
 
The castle provided a number of ‘bits' but no finished songs. We left in disarray and headed back down South but only after a night out in Edinburgh on a ‘bonding session' ended up with us all separating and me getting a kicking off a bouncer while being drunk in charge of a human being. I arrived back at the castle covered in blood and with a nasty gash in my head. It was all over the papers. Great night out! Bob Ezrin was up for producing the album and to hopefully give the album more ‘credibility' in the USA. I was sent to meet him at Dave Gilmour's house in Maida Vale as he'd just finished the Floyd tour. I was supposed to be put on the straight and narrow and to get this ‘political nonsense' out of my head. The meeting went great and he was into the lyrics I had. He sent me away to write a drinking song. I wrote ‘The Company'. He agreed to come and hear the band's material and when he arrived I sat in the back of the small studio in Oxfordshire (I went there once) and pronounced that these were only ‘bits of songs' and nowhere near ready to consider recording. It didn't go down well and after he left the silence was awesome. Soon it was back to normal and the ‘bits' were being joined onto other ‘bits' again. We were getting nowhere very fast.

I wanted to write more ‘songs' but wasn't expressing myself well. I was tired. I wanted to get away from the Marillion machine for a while. I had a personal life to get sorted out and finances to straighten out as the promised windfall hadn't arrived. John had got it wrong again. There was a meeting arranged at my house. The band met with John at Ian's before and arrived with what seemed a pre-determined agenda. I was furious and that night I drank a 40 ounce bottle of Jim Beam on my own while at my cousin's house. I woke up that afternoon and wrote my resignation letter. The Christmas tour was cancelled.

I've thought a lot about that time and where it went wrong. I recently met up with the other guys in Oxford and we talked about the break up. We all felt the same way. However it's easy to deal in retrospect. I now understand a lot more and I'm not as bullish and stubborn as I was in ‘88. We've all changed and age has done us all proud. 5 family guys sat round a table and we discussed the affair as adults and most importantly as good friends. All in all there was one element which we all agreed created the biggest problem and that was the management. We toured far too much and always in the same areas to the point of overexposure. We should have taken a year off. I should have made my solo album and got it out my system while the others followed their projects and we could have come back in ‘89 with a new and fresh Marillion album. We all needed a break from each other and to recapture our private and personal lives away from the band. We needed to grow as people not as a band.
 
The management wouldn't have had the income though and my offer to resign was readily accepted. It was John who phoned me and said the band wouldn't accept my terms for remaining in the band, one of which was John's removal from office. We were all immature in how we dealt with the situation and I honestly believe that stronger management would not have allowed this self destruction to occur. Yes as reported at the time I had been over indulging on all levels but there was never a problem. It didn't help. I recognised that it would become a problem as another tour could have ruined me and my marriage. I made the decision then and I'd do it again if given the same set of circumstances.
 
I listened to the Dalnaglar tapes for the first time the other day and I was surprised at how good the material was. It is rough but the promise was there. A year of fermentation would have provided a heady brew. I left the band after 7 years and 4 great studio albums with no regrets and a sense of pride and accomplishment. People are always on about a reunion tour and no doubt they'll not be quietened by the release of the ‘missing tapes'. In answer to those who still hold a torch for that era and a reformation of the 81-88 line up I can only say that I'm sure as individuals we'll work together somewhere in the future but as for anything else you would be clutching at straws.
 
MARK WILKINSON

I had the idea to do something radically different with this sleeve, and at the meeting with the band was surprised to see Fish have a more backseat role in the thought processes... at least to begin with. I invited a photographer friend of mine, Janus Van Helfteren to the preliminary round - table discussion at EMI and it was agreed by all to try a combination, part illustration and part photography, a collage if you will.
 
The original deadline had allowed me time to draught out some rough ideas of the main character 'Torch'. He was a 'spirit guide', trawling the dark underbelly of alcohol - infused caverns inhabited by the 'guest stars' that Fish wanted at the scene. Jack Kerouac.....natch! Hemingway, Coleridge, Truman Capote.....sure! James Dean, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin....yup! Lenny Bruce, Tony Hancock, W.C.Fields........the list goes on. A proverbial slew of characters, all lined up in the bar telling stories and colliding with greatness as well as the walls! A powerful concoction, all about 'Roman candles burning out'. All about being near the 'edge'. Torch was the pivotal figure, a guardian angel at the end of the bar, destroyer of worlds as well as savior! Well I did him as I did him, spent a while on that, decided on twenty or so of these inhabitants of the bar from an exhaustive list, and Janus arranged a photo shoot with the band at the Bakers Arms in Colchester. The afternoon drinking club there watched with mild detachment as we arranged the scene at the bar (minus celebs of course, they were to be painted in later!)
 
The scene in the pool room for the back was shot time and again to get the right ambience, someone at EMI moaned about Fish and fag, but we insisted. This was serious stuff after all. Lou Reed had written about similar self abuse twenty years before but still had problems with marketing and sleeve artwork I seem to remember. Nothing changes.
 
I had my photo, Janus had done a great job on that. The lighting - especially that ghostly chair in the foreground of the front cover looked just right. I had done me sketches of the ensemble cast to be painted on thin paper, carefully cut out and assembled, no...glued on!
THEN I got a call from J.A. 'Whaaaaat!' Some extra Summer Festivals slotted into the tour itinerary produced a tighter deadline than I had originally been given. This affected the release date of the album. Well, John was only doing his job I guess. I HAD to do mine...but in a fraction of the time I had planned.

Fish and I cut the list down to the few rather than the many, I had less than a day to work on each character after the bare time allotted to Torch.
 
It was torture to do. Especially as I got a call almost by the day from EMI or John that if I missed this deadline, the time slot would go, and the tour / album symbiosis put in jeopardy. Somehow I did it, clutching at sleep! EMI were relieved. Fish seemed OK. The rest of the band were a bit unmoved, it was so different to the previous sleeves. I was bloody disappointed! I loved this album, still do. It was some kind of pinnacle as far as I am concerned. Probably my favourite of theirs.

And I felt cheated!

It was not the sleeve I had imagined.

You don't win them all, believe me!
 
RACKET RECORDS STAFF

This album was originally released on LP, 12" Picture Disc, Cassette, and the first Marillion album to be released on CD. The vinyl releases of Clutching at Straws do not contain the track "Going Under."
 
EMI have released both a full-booklet 2CD Remastered version and a scaled-down-booklet 1CD remastered version of this album.

In 2005, a vinyl replica version of this album was released in Japan on CD, in a miniaturised version of the original LP packaging. The disc is the remastered version, and the track listing is per Disc 1 of the 2CD release, listed on this page.

After recording and touring this album, the band began working on the next album. It was at this time that Fish decided to leave Marillion to pursue a solo career. The majority of the Remaster Bonus Disc contains these original (and very rare) demos. Most of the music ended up being used on Marillion's Seasons End album, and the lyrics on Fish's solo albums.