Online Encyclopedia
Doolittle (album)
Doolittle | ||
---|---|---|
Album by the Pixies | ||
Released | April 18, 1989 | |
Recorded | Downtown Records in Boston, Massachusetts, 1988 | |
Genre | Alternative, College rock | |
Length | 40 min 03 s | |
Record label | 4AD/Elektra Records | |
Producer | Gil Norton | |
Professional reviews | ||
Allmusic.com | 5 stars out of 5 | link |
The Pixies chronology | ||
Surfer Rosa (1988) |
Doolittle (1989) |
Bossanova (1990) |
Doolittle is the Pixies' second LP album, released in April 1989 through the 4AD label (green-brown cover). The album was re-released in May 2003 (blue-brown cover). The album title comes from the "Mr. Grieves" lyric "Pray for a man in the middle / One that talks like Doolittle".
Contents |
Track listing
- "Debaser"
- "Tame"
- "Wave Of Mutilation"
- "I Bleed"
- "Here Comes Your Man"
- "Dead"
- "Monkey Gone To Heaven"
- "Mr. Grieves"
- "Crackity Jones"
- "La La Love You"
- "No. 13 Baby"
- "There Goes My Gun"
- "Hey"
- "Silver"
- "Gouge Away"
Credits
Black Francis - vocals, guitar Kim Deal - bass guitar (slide guitar on "Silver") Joey Santiago - lead guitar, backing vocals David Lovering - drums (lead vocal on "La La Love You", bass guitar on "Silver")
Produced and Engineered by Gil Norton Assistant Engineers: Dave Snider and Matt Lane Mixing Engineer: Steve Haigler Recorded at Downtown Records, Boston, M.A. Mixed at Carriage House Studios, Stamford, C.T. All songs written by Black Francis except "Silver" (Black Francis/Kim Deal) Published by Rice 'n' Beans Music BMI
Additional musicians on Monkey: Karen Karlsrud - violin Corine Metter - violin Arthur Fiacco - cello Ann Rorich - cello Art Direction and Design: Vaughan Oliver /v23 Photography: Simon Larbalestier Managed by Ken Goes , Box 9515, North Dartmouth M.a. 02746, United States of America
Trivia
The first track, "Debaser", references a short surrealist silent film, Un Chien Andalou, made in 1928 by Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí. The song's lyrics, "I am un chien andalusia", mix part of the French movie title, the English name of the place Andalusia that Andalou ("Andalusian") pertains to, and a Spanish pronunciation of "Un". The lyrics "Slicing up eyeballs, I want you to know" refer to the first scene of the movie. That scene's visuals imply that a woman's eye is cut with a razor, and it is often recalled as actually portraying the cut. The line "Got me a movie, I want you to know" reinforces both of these parallels by its explicit mention of film.
External links
Previous: Surfer Rosa |
Pixies Albums | Next: Bossanova |