Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Cake (album)
1990 studio album by the Trash Can Sinatras From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Cake is the debut studio album by Scottish pop/rock band the Trash Can Sinatras, released in 1990.[3][4]
The album peaked at No. 74 on the UK Albums Chart.[5]
Remove ads
Production
The album was recorded at Shabby Road, the band's studio that was paid for with their record advance.[6]
Critical reception
Summarize
Perspective
Johnny Dee of Record Mirror described Cake as an album with "lush, layered guitars that strum and chime" and also noted the "sharp-witted lyrics" which are "over-running with inspired metaphores and word-play". He felt the album suffered from "over production", where "a thick fog descends over some tracks when perhaps misty morning fluffiness was the desired effect". He concluded, "But little can spoil the sheer beauty of 'You Made Me Feel', 'Thrupenny Tears' or alert pop of 'Obscurity Knocks' and 'Best Man's Fall'. A cherry short of a gateaux but plenty of chocolate."[9]
Trouser Press described the album as "exceptionally good" and "pristine-sounding," writing that the producers add "an occasional light brush of cool jazz to the folky spines of the band's witty and agile tunes."[1] Entertainment Weekly wrote: "Loaded with bright splashes of guitar and vocal harmonies, the five-member Scottish group Trash Can Sinatras’ debut album is breezy pop with a backbeat and mercifully little attitude."[8] The Los Angeles Times called the album "tasty but hardly gripping."[10] The Washington Post wrote that Cake "crafts elegant neo-pop soundscapes from little more than vocal harmonies and chiming semi-acoustic guitar riffs and strums."[11] Time called it "an excellent brand of pub pop: simple, insinuating melodies, lyrics with propulsive good humor."[12]
Remove ads
Track listing
Personnel
- The Trash Can Sinatras
- Francis Reader - vocals
- John Douglas, Paul Livingston - guitar
- George McDaid - bass
- Stephen Douglas - drums
with:
- Clark Sorley - piano on "Maybe I Should Drive", "Thrupenny Tears" and "You Made Me Feel", keyboards on "Only Tongue Can Tell"
- Ronnie Goodman - percussion on "Thrupenny Tears"
- Audrey Riley - strings on "Thrupenny Tears" and "Funny"
- Gavin McComb - cello on "The Best Man's Fall"
- Clare Thompson - violin on "Only Tongue Can Tell"
- Mags, Richeal Reader - backing vocals on "Circling the Circumference"
Remove ads
Charts
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads