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NRBQ (album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NRBQ
Studio album by
Released1999
GenreRock
LabelRounder
ProducerTerry Adams, Joey Spampinato
NRBQ chronology
You Gotta Be Loose
(1998)
NRBQ
(1999)
Atsa My Band
(2002)

NRBQ is an album by the American band NRBQ, released in 1999.[1][2] According to NRBQ, the album is untitled, with just the band's name on the cover.[3] It was NRBQ's final studio album for Rounder Records.[4]

The album coincided with NRBQ's 30th anniversary and a period of renewed interest in the band, during which they appeared in The Simpsons and the film 28 Days.[5][6] The band supported the album with a North American tour that included a 30th anniversary celebration with the Shaggs.[7][8]

Production

[edit]

The album was recorded between January and May of 1999.[9] It was the first regular studio album with Johnny Spampinato on lead guitar; he wrote some of the album's songs with his brother.[10][11] "Housekeeping" was inspired by decades of being awakened by hotel maids while on tour.[12] "Tired of Your Permanent" was influenced by rockabilly music.[3] "Birdman" was originally intended for Space Ghost Coast to Coast.[13]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[5]
Orlando Sentinel[14]
(The New) Rolling Stone Album Guide[15]
Winston-Salem Journal[16]

The Hartford Courant noted that "I Want My Mommy" "may well be the most annoying NRBQ song of all time."[17] The Orlando Sentinel determined that the "gorgeous 'Blame It on the World' ... sounds like a long-lost McCartney-Gilberto Gil collaboration."[14] The Courier News concluded that, "for the first time in many years, an NRBQ studio album fails to contain at least one truly memorable song."[18]

The Telegram & Gazette stated that the album is "rocking, jazzy, bluesy, ballady, cartoony stuff pulled together with a patented NRBQ sense of logic."[19] The New York Times wrote that NRBQ "still loves the same basic rock ingredients: the ingratiating melodies of 1960's pop, the twang and two-beat of rockabilly and the splashy, rowdy piano playing that links Jerry Lee Lewis to Sun Ra."[20] The Morning Call listed NRBQ among the worst albums of 1999.[21] The Winston-Salem Journal opined that "the aging band's air of childlike innocence, once charming, now seems creepy."[16]

Track listing

[edit]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Ain't No Horse"Donn Adams, Terry Adams3:46
2."Sail On Sail On"Joey Spampinato3:10
3."Pain"T. Adams2:33
4."Housekeeping"Joey Spampinato, Johnny Spampinato, T. Adams3:26
5."Breakaway to My Dreams"Joey Spampinato, Johnny Spampinato2:52
6."Puddin' Truck"T. Adams3:14
7."CM Pups"T. Adams3:09
8."Take Me to Your Secret"Joey Spampinato, Johnny Spampinato, T. Adams2:47
9."Blame It on the World"Joey Spampinato, Johnny Spampinato3:02
10."Birdman"David Greenberger, T. Adams1:03
11."I Want My Mommy"T. Adams2:01
12."Careful What You Ask For"Joey Spampinato3:23
13."Tired of Your Permanent"T. Adams2:05
14."Love Came to Me"Joey Spampinato3:05
15."Termites"T. Adams3:22

References

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  1. ^ Haymes, Greg (19 Aug 1999). "Staying Power". Times Union. Albany. p. P4.
  2. ^ Gettelman, Parry (29 Aug 1999). "And speaking of bold veterans...". Season Preview. Orlando Sentinel. p. 4.
  3. ^ a b Booth, Philip (4 Feb 2000). "NRBQ: The same after all these years". Ticket. Sarasota Herald-Tribune. p. 4.
  4. ^ Milano, Brett (14 Oct 2000). "Music Review". Arts & Lifestyle. Boston Herald. p. 25.
  5. ^ a b "NRBQ [1999] Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  6. ^ Bessman, Jim (Aug 21, 1999). "Rounder's NRBQ marks 30 years". Billboard. Vol. 111, no. 34. pp. 1, 84.
  7. ^ Pizek, Jeff (17 Sep 1999). "NRBQ with the Mike Plume Band". Time Out. Daily Herald. Arlington Heights. p. 4.
  8. ^ Schardl, Kati (28 Jan 2000). "NRBQ: Electric and Electrifying". Tallahassee Democrat. p. F14.
  9. ^ Aloi, Daniel (18 Aug 1999). "Me and the boys: The Q still rocking". Star-Gazette. p. D3.
  10. ^ Beckerman, Jim (30 Sep 1999). "NRBQ Is Worshipped by the Best of Them". The Record. Bergen County. p. Y3.
  11. ^ Seiler, Andy (5 May 2000). "NRBQ rocking three decades on". USA Today. p. 2E.
  12. ^ Himes, Geoffrey (3 Dec 1999). "NRBQ 'NRBQ' Rounder". The Washington Post. p. WW7.
  13. ^ Musser, Jim (16 Sep 1999). "NRBQ: 'Still crazy after all these years'". Iowa City Press-Citizen. p. 2D.
  14. ^ a b Gettelman, Parry (24 Sep 1999). "Sublime 'NRBQ' Head to Silly Side". Calendar. Orlando Sentinel. p. 12.
  15. ^ (The New) Rolling Stone Album Guide. Simon & Schuster. 2004. p. 592.
  16. ^ a b Bumgardner, Ed (24 Sep 1999). "Music". Winston-Salem Journal. p. E8.
  17. ^ Catlin, Roger (16 Sep 1999). "They're Still Here, Wherever That Is". Calendar. Hartford Courant. p. 6.
  18. ^ Junior, Chris M. (7 Oct 1999). "Album Reviews". Courier News. p. D8.
  19. ^ McLennan, Scott (7 Oct 1999). "Quirky NRBQ defies definition and thrives on eccentricities". Telegram & Gazette. p. C5.
  20. ^ Pareles, Jon (19 Nov 1999). "Pop and Jazz Guide". The New York Times. p. E31.
  21. ^ Righi, Len (8 Jan 2000). "Worst". The Morning Call. p. A33.