Puneet Varma (Editor)

Fashionably Late (The Slickee Boys album)

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Released
  
1988

Label
  
New Rose

Artist
  
The Slickee Boys

Genre
  
Rock music

Length
  
45:00

Producer
  
The Slickee Boys

Release date
  
1988

Fashionably Late (The Slickee Boys album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb4

Similar
  
Live at Last, Uh Oh… No Breaks!, Here to Stay, Somewhat of an Anthology, Cybernetic Dreams of Pi

Washington D.C.'s Slickee Boys' fourth and final "proper" album (not including compilations or live releases), Fashionably Late was released (on LP and CD) in early 1988 by the French New Rose label. That summer, they toured Europe (documented on their Live at Last album); soon afterwards, founding member Kim Kane departed to focus on his newer band, Date Bait. After a few more years of live shows, the Slickee Boys called it quits (reunion shows have taken place more or less annually since the early 1990s).

Contents

The song "Your Autumn Eyes", which was released as a single during the summer of 1987 (the same version which appears on the album), was quite a departure for the band—a melancholy waltz-time ballad with an intense bridge/guitar solo. Most of the rest of the album, however, was what fans had come to expect from the band.

Along with original songs written by members of the band, there are two cover songs: "You Can Run" was originally released by D.C.'s (The) Razz, and "The Mean Screen" was by the Gizmos (long-time friends of the Slickee Boys).

The compact disc version includes as bonus tracks both songs from the b-side of the "Your Autumn Eyes" 7"—an original, "Eye to Eye" and a cover of Gary Lewis and the Playboys' "Without a Word of Warning".

Falling in reverse fashionably late single


Track listing

  1. "Sleepless Nights" – 2:21 (John Chumbris)
  2. "Hesitation" – 3:25 (Chumbris, Mark Noone)
  3. "The Missing Part" – 2:32 (Chumbris)
  4. "You Can Run" – 3:30 (Tommy Keene, Michael Reidy)
  5. "Blind Deaf & Dumb" – 2:50 (Marshall Keith)
  6. "The Mean Screen" – 1:57 (Scott Duhamel, Eddie Flowers, Kenne Highland)
  7. "Your Autumn Eyes" – 4:55 (Kim Kane, Keith, Noone)
  8. "Droppin' Off to Sleep" – 4:28 (Noone)
  9. "The Dive" – 4:45 (Noone)
  10. "If I Could Lie" – 4:27 (Keith, Noone)
  11. "Love Twilight" – 3:33 (Kane, Keith)
  12. "Eye to Eye" – 3:39 (Noone)
  13. "Without a Word of Warning" – 2:20 (Snuff Garrett, Leon Russell, Gary Lewis)

The band

  • Marshall Keith — Lead guitar, acoustic guitar, keyboards on "Hesitation", back-up vocals, Marvox on "Your Autumn Eyes"
  • Kim Kane — Rhythm guitar, kimaphone, rude noises, vocals on "Love Twilight"
  • John Chumbris — Bass guitar, extra guitars on "Sleepless Nights", "The Missing Part" and "Hesitation", back-up vocals, keyboards on "The Missing Part", "Your Autumn Eyes" and "Love Twilight"
  • Dan Palenski — drums, back-up vocals, tambourine on "Love Twilight"
  • Giles Cook — Drums
  • Mark Noone — Vocals
  • Production

  • Steve Carr — Engineer ("Hesitation", "Blind Deaf & Dumb", "Droppin' Off to Sleep", "Love Twilight")
  • John Chumbris — Engineer ("You Can Run", "The Mean Screen", "Your Autumn Eyes", "If I Could Lie"), mixing ("Hesitation", "You Can Run", "Blind Deaf & Dumb", "The Mean Screen", "Your Autumn Eyes", "Droppin' Off to Sleep", "If I Could Lie")
  • Mark Noone — Mixing ("Love Twilight")
  • Don Zientara — Engineer ("Sleepless Nights", "The Missing Part", "The Dive")
  • Giles Cook — Mixing ("Sleepless Nights", "The Missing Part", "The Dive")
  • Additional credits

  • Recorded at Inner Ear Studios, Arlington, Virginia and Hit & Run Studios, Rockville, Maryland
  • Kim Kane — Drawings
  • Eileen McNalley — Photo of fan
  • Huart/Cholley — Sleeve design
  • Errata

    On both the LP and CD (though not on the LP labels) the track listing is incorrect: the second and third tracks are reversed. The correct order is shown above.

    Alternative version

    In 2006, Last Call Records (run by one of the two founders of New Rose) released a double CD of Fashionably Late and Live at Last. It had new cover art but no added material.

    References

    Fashionably Late (The Slickee Boys album) Wikipedia