SP
BravenNow
Squeeze’s Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford Go Time-Tripping With ‘Trixies,’ a Terrific New Concept Album They Wrote but Never Recorded in the 1970s
| USA | culture | ✓ Verified - variety.com

Squeeze’s Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford Go Time-Tripping With ‘Trixies,’ a Terrific New Concept Album They Wrote but Never Recorded in the 1970s

📖 Full Retelling

If you wrote a terrific batch of material as a young artist, would you immediately set out to record it, or would you put it into a time capsule, bury it and think, “This might come in handy in 50 years”? Historically, not many singer-songwriters or bands have taken the latter option. But Squeeze did […]

Entity Intersection Graph

No entity connections available yet for this article.

}
Original Source
Mar 9, 2026 3:37pm PT Squeeze’s Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford Go Time-Tripping With ‘Trixies,’ a Terrific New Concept Album They Wrote but Never Recorded in the 1970s By Chris Willman Plus Icon Chris Willman Senior Music Writer and Chief Music Critic ChrisWillman Latest Squeeze’s Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford Go Time-Tripping With ‘Trixies,’ a Terrific New Concept Album They Wrote but Never Recorded in the 1970s 6 minutes ago Country Joe McDonald, Woodstock Star Who Found Counterculture Fame With ‘I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die Rag,’ Dies at 84 1 day ago Latest Kennedy Center Exit: Director of National Symphony Orchestra Quits, Will Head to L.A. to Become CEO of the Wallis 2 days ago See All If you wrote a terrific batch of material as a young artist, would you immediately set out to record it, or would you put it into a time capsule, bury it and think, “This might come in handy in 50 years”? Historically, not many singer-songwriters or bands have taken the latter option. But Squeeze did — effectively, if not as a conscious decision — and now it’s finally paying off as the band’s new album, “Trixies,” makes good on an early promise with a unique instance of very delayed gratification. The unusual narrative behind the new release is this: Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford met as teenagers and virtual neighbors in the U.K. in the early 1970s and immediately struck up a songwriting partnership that would last for a half-century (and counting). Their first collaboration in 1974 was a song cycle, or would-be concept album, called “Trixies,” about imagined goings-on in the kind of London nightclubs they were still too young to inhabit. But they had long since set the material aside by the time they released their debut album in 1978, as the new wave era dictated a simpler, rockier style than the progressive pop of “Trixies.” Popular on Variety Flash forward to the mid-2020s and suddenly that archived and mostly forgotten material is sounding very good to their current...
Read full article at source

Source

variety.com

More from USA

News from Other Countries

🇬🇧 United Kingdom

🇺🇦 Ukraine