请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Sideways (Men Without Hats album)
释义

  1. History

  2. Critical response

  3. Track listing

  4. Singles

  5. Personnel

  6. References

  7. External links

{{refimprove|date=December 2016}}{{Infobox album
| name = Sideways
| type = Album
| artist = Men Without Hats
| cover = Men Without Hats Sideways.jpg
| alt =
| released = April 30, 1991 (Canada)
January 25, 1992 (Japan)
| recorded = 1990, Hudson Studios (Briarcliff Manor, New York)
| venue =
| studio =
| genre = Alternative rock, hard rock, country rock
| length = 50:08
| label = PolyGram
| producer = Stefan Doroschuk, Mike Scott
| prev_title = The Adventures of Women & Men Without Hate in the 21st Century
| prev_year = 1989
| next_title = Greatest Hats
| next_year = 1996
| misc = {{Singles
| name = Sideways
| type = album
| single1 = Sideways
| single1date = April 1991
| single2 = Kenbarbielove
| single2date = 1991
| single3 = Fall Down Gently
| single3date = 1992
}}
}}

Sideways is the fifth studio album by Canadian synthpop group Men Without Hats. Released on April 30, 1991, it featured a new sound based around electric guitars instead of the group's normal use of synthesizers.[1] It was the second album to be recorded at Hudson Studios in New York and produced by bassist Stefan Doroschuk, with Mike Scott as co-producer.

Despite the group's insistence that guitars were the wave of the future, the album failed to attract an American label and was released only in Canada and Japan, although there are many imports that have made their way to American, European and Australian shelves.

{{Album reviews
|rev1 = Allmusic
|rev1score = {{Rating|2|5}}[2]
}}

History

In December 1989, during The Adventures of Women & Men Without Hate in the 21st Century tour, guitarist Stefan Doroschuk was involved in a car accident in which both his legs and one of his arms were broken, necessitating the postponement of the tour. To pass the time, bandleader Ivan Doroschuk began jamming with Voivod drummer Michel Langevin and Doughboys member John Kastner and listening to Bleach by Nirvana, which would shape the sound of the album. According to Doroschuk, he was tired of being pressured by his record label to come up with another "Safety Dance", and instead wanted to take the album in a very different direction than anything the band had done in the past.[1][3] A few months later, Stefan rejoined the band, this time switching to bass, and the new band began to tour. On 24 December 1990, Men Without Hats shared the stage with Mitsou at Les Foufounes Electriques in Montreal, performing many of their hits, rearranged in their new hard rock style, and most of the tracks that would become Sideways. The band eschewed the use of either of their logos (the crossed out man wearing a hat and the heart with the number 21 in it) for this release, instead opting to use a simple font (MENWITHOUTHATS). They also decided to abandon the left-wing politics that had defined Pop Goes the World and In the 21st Century, instead writing simple non-political songs about life.

The band returned to Briarcliff Manor, where they had recorded ...In the 21st Century two years prior, to record the album. It was released in May 1991 on PolyGram/Mercury. The album was not commercially successful, which led to the group's dissolution in 1993. On January 25, 1992, Polydor released the album in Japan. The band would not release new material until No Hats Beyond This Point twelve years later.

Two singles were released to promote the album: "Sideways" (which also had an accompanying music video), and "In the Meadow". "Kenbarbielove" was also released as a promo single. The song title "Kenbarbielove" was derived from a longtime running joke between Ivan Doroschuk and Langevin; as a francophone who was not fluent in English in childhood, Langevin misunderstood the Beatles song "Can't Buy Me Love" as "Ken Barbie Love" the first time he heard it.[4]

On the concert tour to support the album, even the band's older hits, including "The Safety Dance", "Pop Goes the World" and "Hey Men", were readapted to fit the rock-oriented sound.[5]

"Everybody Wants to Know", the album's sole ballad, was written in 1985. It was intended for Pop Goes the World, but it was left off at the last minute and replaced with "Jenny Wore Black". It was also recorded for The Adventures of Women and Men Without Hate in the 21st Century in 1988, but was replaced by "All We Do". It was finally recorded in 1990 for Sideways.

The font used for the "Sideways" wordmark on the album cover is similar to the one used on the Genesis albums Nursery Cryme and Foxtrot for that band's logo.

Due to being recorded in the United States, the album does not qualify for the "P" (performance) element of MAPL Canadian content certification. The CD indicates that the album is 75% Canadian content (CanCon) except for "I Am the Walrus", which is 25% CanCon.

Critical response

Evelyn Erskine of the Ottawa Citizen wrote that "All that is apparent here is that the Men have given up on sappy electro-pop. They have plugged in the heavy guitars to kick butt and wail. But their pop songcraft has not been thrown into the compost heap. The Men still have an ear for a melody and a hook which give the screaming guitars and turbo drumming their sonic direction,"[6] while Ted Shaw of the Windsor Star wrote that the album "harkens back to the late-1960s and early-'70s when rock was moving towards heavy metal but still grounded in the blues."[7]

Track listing

{{tracklist
|all_writing=Ivan and Stefan Doroschuk except "I Am the Walrus" by Lennon-McCartney
|title1=Sideways
|length1=5:01
|title2=Fall Down Gently
|length2=3:00
|title3=In the Meadow
|length3=3:43
|title4=The Van der Graaf Generation Blues
|length4=2:17
|title5=Nadine
|length5=3:44
|title6=Everybody Wants to Know
|length6=5:24
|title7=I Am the Walrus ("No You're Not", Said Little Nicola)
|length7=5:05
|title8=Kenbarbielove
|length8=4:13
|title9=Lost Forever
|length9=6:11
|title10=Life After Diamond Head
|length10=2:29
|title11=Love (All Over the World)
|length11=3:47
|title12=Harry Crews
|length12=5:14
}}

Singles

  • "Sideways" (1991)
  • "Kenbarbielove" (1991)
  • "In the Meadow" (1992)

Personnel

  • Ivan Doroschuk – vocals, guitar
  • Félix Matte – lead guitar
  • John Kastner – rhythm guitar
  • Stefan Doroschuk – bass, backing vocals
  • Michel Langevin – drums (except "I Am the Walrus")
  • Colin Doroschuk – keyboards, backing vocals, guitar
  • Greg Martin – guitar on "I Am the Walrus"
  • Corky Laing – drums on "I Am the Walrus"
  • Produced by Stefan Doroschuk and Mike Scott
  • Recorded by Mike Scott at Hudson Studios (Briarcliffe Manor), New York, 1990
  • Mixed by Tom Soares and Joe Pires at Normandy Sound, Warren, Rhode Island, 1990

References

1. ^"Man Without Hat takes Sideways plunge". Montreal Gazette, May 23, 1991.
2. ^{{Allmusic|class=album|id=r171998}}
3. ^"Men Without Hats are learning contentment". Kingston Whig-Standard, June 21, 1991.
4. ^"Men take another direction: Canadian group Men Without Hats have come full circle with new album". Windsor Star, June 20, 1991.
5. ^"Rocker rebirth has honest ring: Men Without Hats sporting a new sound". The Globe and Mail, June 22, 1991.
6. ^"Men Without Hats finally shake it loose". Ottawa Citizen, May 25, 1991.
7. ^"Record Reviews: Sideways, Men Without Hats". Windsor Star, May 11, 1991.

External links

  • [https://www.discogs.com/Men-Without-Hats-Sideways/master/603353 Sideways] at Discogs (list of versions)
{{Men Without Hats}}

4 : 1991 albums|Briarcliff Manor, New York|Men Without Hats albums|PolyGram albums

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/14 5:10:26