Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Hello (Poe album)
1995 studio album by Poe From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Hello is the debut album by the American singer-songwriter Poe.[4][5] It was released in 1995 on Modern Records.[6]
Remove ads
Background
Aside from the Detroit studio of album producer RJ Rice, the recording of Hello took place at a variety of studios in Los Angeles.[7]
The first music video for the album was for the single "Angry Johnny"; it featured Poe on the skeletal frame of a bed looking forlorn whilst destroying a variety of effects one might associate with romance (like roses or a box of chocolates). The song's rage-filled lyrics quickly found her being lumped into the "angry female rocker" category, and the video was heavily played on MTV's Alternative Nation. The second single, "Hello", did not fare as well, until a remix version was released two years after the album's initial release. At least one other track (Junkie) was remixed as well, since the 1999 CD-quality download of 'Hello' contains a version of 'Junkie' with more instrument layers (horns and warbly guitar) that is 6 seconds shorter than the 3:06 original.
Hello was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America on November 20, 1996.[8]
Remove ads
Critical reception
Trouser Press wrote that "Poe has enough personality to keep the pleasant and occasionally intriguing album her own, but not enough to make it a strong statement."[6] MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide called the album "a mess of over-personal, overproduced folk songs," aside from "Trigger Happy Jack" and "Angry Johnny."[3] Tulsa World wrote that Poe "rips and rocks, but she doesn't kick out the jams at the expense of the songcraft."[9] Glen Ballard in an interview on Spotify's Landmark series quoted "Around the time, I was making this record Jagged Little Pill, I heard some tracks by an artist named Poe. I heard a couple of these things and it really blew my mind. As much as anything, the Poe record, "Hello", was probably the biggest influence I had at that time, honestly, because it was a brilliant record that had jazz influence, hip hop, electronic, rock. It was a hybrid of the first degree."[10]
Remove ads
Track listing
All lyrics are written by Poe.[7]
- Sample credits
- "Fingertips" contains a vocal sample from "Like a Lover" as performed by Sérgio Mendes and Brasil '66.
Personnel
Summarize
Perspective
Credits adapted from CD liner notes.[7]
Musicians
|
|
Technical
|
|
Design
- Beau Barton – art direction, design, cover photography
- Thomas Bricker – art direction, design, additional photography
- Amanda Cruz – photography
- Marty Levin – back cover photography
- Poe – lyric collages
Remove ads
Chart positions
Album – Billboard (US)
Singles – Billboard (US)
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads