John Greaves, from the English
avant-rock group
Henry Cow, and
Peter Blegvad, from the German/English avant-pop trio
Slapp Happy, first worked together during the merger of the two groups in England in 1974. Slapp Happy and Henry Cow recorded their first collaboration album,
Desperate Straights in late 1974, and the song "Bad Alchemy" from the album was Greaves and Blegvad's first collaborative songwriting effort. After the two groups recorded their second album,
In Praise of Learning in early 1975, the merger ended and Blegvad moved to New York City. There Blegvad spent the rest of the year earning a living as an illustrator, which included drawing backgrounds for
Peanuts animated films. In March 1976 Greaves left Henry Cow and joined Blegvad in New York City to start work on
Kew. Rhone. Virgin Records, Henry Cow and Slapp Happy's record label at the time, funded the project. Blegvad wrote "surreal" lyrics that were filled with "
anagrams,
palindromes and other verbal games", Some of the songs on the album are not fully comprehensible without reference to these pictures. At the time Blegvad had begun experimenting with
cartooning, an activity that later led to him doing a weekly comic strip for
The Independent on Sunday called
Leviathan, and he was fascinated with the relationship between text and image. When
Kew. Rhone. was ready to record, jazz musicians
Michael Mantler and
Carla Bley offered the use of their Grog Kill Studio in
Woodstock, New York. Mantler and Bley also played on the album, along with
avant-garde jazz drummer
Andrew Cyrille, vocalist Lisa Herman and others.
Virgin Records released "Kew. Rhone." in the UK in March 1977. Greaves and Blegvad next worked together on each other's solo albums, Greaves'
Accident (1982) and Blegvad's
The Naked Shakespeare (1983), but did not record an album under their names again until
Unearthed in 1995. They also participated in several bands together, including
The Lodge (1987–1989) and The Peter Blegvad Trio (with
Chris Cutler). ==
Kew. Rhone.==