Atkin made his first recording in 1967: a private pressing of 160 copies of
While The Music Lasts, with vocals by Atkin and fellow Footlights alum Julie Covington and songs written by Atkin solo as well as with Clive James. Next year he was taken to
EMI with Julie Covington to record the most popular number from the 1967 Revue Show: the complex "Duet", which had appeared on his first album. At six minutes, it was too long to be a single and has never received commercial release; the tape has since been lost. Atkin released a second privately pressed album, consisting of 99 copies, in 1969. ''The Party's Moving On'' featured performances by Atkin and Covington and songs co-written by James.
Essex Music funded the recording of fourteen Atkin/James tracks in 1969. The producer,
Don Paul, was a friend of the disc jockey
Kenny Everett, who played, amongst others, the song "Master of the Revels." In 1970, Atkin, Covington and
Dai Davies recorded a series of twelve 15-minute programmes edited by James for
London Weekend Television. These shows, also called ''The Party's Moving On
, each featured three songs and were broadcast only in London late at night. They led to the commissioning of the larger revue format series What Are You Doing After The Show?''. That year, Covington released several singles penned by Atkin and James, followed by the 1970 release of Atkin's first album
Beware of the Beautiful Stranger. In 1971, Covington released her first album,
The Beautiful Changes with the majority of songs by Atkin and James. Atkin did, and still does, write his own lyrics, but it was the collaboration with Clive James that produced his most famous songs. Despite the investment this implied, Atkin and James became increasingly dissatisfied with their handling by RCA. After the release of the next album
Secret Drinker they had no wish to continue the relationship, and to fill their contractual obligations they concocted the album
Live Libel, a collection of humour pieces which Atkin had used over the years to lighten the mood in concerts. Paradoxically this album resulted in their most successful tour to date, as James joined Atkin on stage for an evening of song, satire and poetry. James read from his epic poetic satire,
The Fate of Felicity Fark in the Land of the Media while Atkin sang songs from the latest release and previous favourites. To their dismay, the offers from other record labels did not flow in after the tour ended. Clive James returned to his blossoming career in television, while Atkin, after trying to make a living as a carpenter, responded to a 'Situation Vacant' notice from the BBC, and thus embarked on the next phase of his career.
Songs James' lyrics were far from mainstream popular music, being frequently dense with poetic references. At their most accessible they might describe the life of a machine tool shop supervisor, as in "Carnations on the Roof". The song "My Egoist", in contrast, is translated almost entirely from a poem by
Guillaume Apollinaire. Other references include
Rainer Maria Rilke's
Duino Elegies and
William Shakespeare's sonnets. Atkin's musical settings drew most of their inspiration from
Tin Pan Alley, although in the above-mentioned "Carnations on the Roof" he set a sombre description of a working class life to themes characteristic of
Tamla Motown. Often Atkin turned James' intentions upside down, as with "The Last Hill That Shows You All The Valley", which James wrote as a
dirge but which Atkin set to a thumping, angry rock beat. The combination worked as James' mournful cataloguing of
man's inhumanity to man became a cry of protest. A
sonnet in French by
Gérard de Nerval, "
El Desdichado", which begins "
Je suis le ténébreux, le veuf" (roughly
I am the shadowy man, the widower), inspired two separate lyrics by James, one of which was "The Shadow and the Widower", an interior dialogue reflecting on a failed romance as a man wanders home through a sterile urban landscape. The same poem, coincidentally, was set to music and performed by
Flanders and Swann. A detailed breakdown of the references within this song (and several others) can be found on Atkin's website. ==Other work==