



| Album II [DualDisc] (2005 Album by Kem) | |
| Album Is Also Called the Short Happy Life (Album by Short Happy Life) |
| Album III | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Loudon Wainwright III | ||||
| Released | 1972 | |||
| Genre | Folk | |||
| Length | 32:19 | |||
| Label | Columbia | |||
| Producer | Thomas Jefferson Kaye | |||
| Loudon Wainwright III chronology | ||||
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| Professional ratings | |
|---|---|
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
| Robert Christgau | (A-)[2] |
| Rolling Stone | (favorable)[3] |
Album III, as its title indicates, is the third full album from Loudon Wainwright III. It was originally released in 1972 on Columbia Records. Album III would spawn Loudon Wainwright's most popular hit single, "Dead Skunk", making this his commercial 'breakthrough' album. "Dead Skunk" was, however one of the many 'novelty songs' sprinkled throughout Wainwright's career, and rather pigeonholed him as a latter-day Tom Lehrer, to the extent that he appeared in three episodes of M*A*S*H*. Although Wainwright has maintained an ironic, sometimes sepulchral sense of humor, Dead Skunk, despite its commercial success, has dogged him ever since, as he comments on 1985's album I'm Alright, "Were you embarressed about 'Dead Skunk'"?
Nevertheless, Album III launched Wainwright into a mid-1970s commercial heyday, even if his serious side was ignored in favor of his clownish one.
This is also the first of his albums to feature a full backing band (on many tracks). Wainwright mostly eschewed a rocking sound for a stripped down acoustic one from the early 1980s onwards.
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