Following the release of their debut EP,
Human Conflict Number Five, 10,000 Maniacs embarked upon several months of touring independent clubs, including the Eastern seaboard, and achieved a greater following after receiving airplay on college radio. The band decided to return to the studio in the spring of 1983. Like
Human Conflict Number Five before it,
Secrets of the I Ching was recorded at
State University of New York,
Fredonia, and recording commenced the week of March 19, helmed by Albert Garzon, assisted by David Brick. Since the band were not students of the university, they were forced to conduct sessions only in the evening. The album is the first of their recordings with drummer
Jerome Augustyniak. Like
Human Conflict Number Five, the album would bear the band's own fictitious Christian Burial Music imprint but was again manufactured by Mark Records out of Clarence, New York. 2,000 copies were pressed, once again funded by
Dennis Drew's parents, but also aided by
Natalie Merchant, Dan Lombardo, Frank Scuettle, Dan Deutsch and Mark Grosso. Also like their previous EP, the album was later reissued by Press Records in the US and UK, as well as Normal Records in Germany. In addition to garnering college radio airplay in the U.S.,
BBC Radio 1 DJ
John Peel began playing "My Mother the War" in the UK, which led the band to tour there in 1984. ==Critical reception==