Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Violent Femmes (album)

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Released
  
April 1983 (1983-04)

Producer
  
Mark Van Hecke

Release date
  
April 1983

Length
  
36:15

Artist
  
Label
  
Violent Femmes (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenbbcVio

Recorded
  
July 1982; August 31–September 1, 1983 (Tracks 11–12)

Studio
  
Castle Studios in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin; Music Works Studios in London (Tracks 11–12)

Genres
  
Alternative rock, Folk punk

Similar
  
Hallowed Ground, We Can Do Anything, The Blind Leading the Naked, Freak Magnet, Permanent Record: The Very

Violent femmes full album


Violent Femmes is the debut album by Violent Femmes. Mostly recorded in July 1982, the album was released by Slash Records on vinyl and on cassette in April 1983, and on CD in 1987 with two extra tracks "Ugly" and "Gimme the Car".

Contents

In 2002, Rhino Records remastered the album, filled out the disc's length with demos, and added another disc of live tracks and a radio interview for a 20th anniversary special edition, with liner notes by Michael Azerrad.

Violent Femmes is the band's most successful album to date and achieved a rare feat by going gold, four years after its release, and later platinum, four years after that, without having yet made an appearance on the Billboard 200 album chart. After achieving platinum certification on February 1, 1991, the album finally entered the Billboard album chart for the first time on August 3, 1991.

Slant Magazine listed the album at #21 on its list of "Best Albums of the 1980s".

Content

Most of the songs on both this album and its follow-up were written when the songwriter, Gordon Gano, was 18 years old and still in high school in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Violent Femmes peaked at #171 on Billboard's Top 200 album chart in 1991. The cover model was Billie Jo Campbell, a 3-year-old who was walking down a street in California when she and her mother were approached and offered $100 for the photograph which became the album cover.

Reception

In a contemporary review for Rolling Stone, J. D. Considine wrote that Violent Femmes was precocious yet dynamic, with a good balance between Gano's direct lyrics and the full sound of the music. Robert Christgau of The Village Voice compared Gano and the album as a whole to Jonathan Richman of The Modern Lovers. Gano himself grew tired of comparisons to Richman, as by his own account he was actually trying to sound like Steve Wynn of The Dream Syndicate.

In a retrospective write-up for AllMusic, Steve Huey called Violent Femmes "one of the most distinctive records of the early alternative movement and an enduring cult classic", noting that "the music also owes something to the Modern Lovers' minimalism, but powered by Brian Ritchie's busy acoustic bass riffing and the urgency and wild abandon of punk rock, the Femmes forged a sound all their own", while crediting Gano for keeping "the music engaging and compelling without overindulging in his seemingly willful naiveté".

Reviewing the album in 2016, author J.K. Rowling wrote "I loved the album" and rated it 8.5 out of 10.

Track listing

All tracks written by Gordon Gano, except where noted.

Personnel

Violent Femmes
  • Victor DeLorenzo – snare drum, tranceaphone, drum set, Scotch marching bass drum, vocals
  • Gordon Gano – guitar, violin, lead vocals
  • Brian Ritchie – acoustic bass guitar, xylophone, electric bass guitar, vocals
  • Additional personnel
  • Mark Van Hecke – production; piano on "Good Feeling"
  • Luke W. Midkiff – percussion on "Kiss Off"
  • Charts

    Album

    Songs

    1Blister in the Sun2:24
    2Kiss Off2:57
    3Please Do Not Go4:16

    References

    Violent Femmes (album) Wikipedia


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