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Chrome

 
Album Review: Chrome

  • Artist: Catherine Wheel
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: July 20, 1993
  • Total Time: 53:46
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The original title, Crank, would have been apt. Producer Gil Norton (Pixies, Echo & the Bunnymen) was brought in to toughen this band's sound and set them apart from the wave of U.K. upstarts who were pounding U.S. shores. That he did. But it's not necessarily progress; Talk Talk's master experimentalist, Tim Friese-Greene, gave Catherine Wheel's brilliant debut, Ferment, a dripping beauty, opulent textures illuminating barely hidden firepower. On even the most angry, aggressive tracks, such as "Texture" and "Shallow," this shimmering, shuddering mist was still ever-present. Many of those glistening touches have indeed been subtracted by Norton, and they're missed. That Chrome is still a terrific LP proves Catherine Wheel capable of eclipsing the overload. Like another sharp LP that "cranked" for an hour without much sonic letup, Chrome reminds one of Sugar's Copper Blue. Not because Catherine Wheel covered Hüsker Dü on the 30 Century Man EP; it's because that was the last LP that combined this kind of songwriting prowess, raging playing, dynamics, pop tunes gone kablooey, and huge, bonfire sound. And unlike that toasty Sugar LP, this twin-guitar quartet knows how to bring it down: both the spindly single "Crank" and the resplendent "The Nude" seem almost tearful, they're so pretty through the thickness, and the knockout "Strange Fruit" is as fulsome as it is fierce. Rob Dickinson sings as if to choke on his words, yet never loses a gritty determination backed soundly by his and Brian Futter's guitars. Add in heavier versions of previous B-sides-that-deserved-better "Half Life" and "Ursa Major Space Station," and you've got a double play from a band too resolute to fall victim to sophomore slump wimp out, too talented to write half-baked tunes in two minutes, and too strong to glaze out in a shoegaze haze some pigeonholed them in after Ferment. ~ Jack Rabid, The Big Takeover, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Kill Rhythm Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (3:51)
I Confess Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (3:56)
Crank Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (3:45)
Broken Head Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (4:43)
Pain (Lyrics) Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (6:31)
Strange Fruit Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (3:06)
Chrome Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (3:53)
The Nude Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (3:51)
Ursa Major Space Station Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (5:09)
Fripp Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (7:34)
Half Life Catherine Wheel (4:08)
Show Me Mary Catherine Wheel Catherine Wheel (3:19)

Credits

Catherine Wheel (Main Performer), Rob Dickinson (Guitar), Rob Dickinson (Vocals), Tim Friese-Greene (Organ (Hammond)), Brian Futter (Guitar), Brian Futter (Vocals), Dave Hawes (Bass), Gil Norton (Producer), Neil Sims (Percussion), John Lee (Engineer)
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Wikipedia: Chrome (Catherine Wheel album)
Top
Chrome
Studio album by Catherine Wheel
Released July 20, 1993
Genre Alternative rock, Shoegazing
Length 53:46
Label Fontana
Producer Gil Norton
Professional reviews
Catherine Wheel chronology
Ferment
(1992)
Chrome
(1993)
Happy Days
(1995)

Chrome is the second full-length album by the U.K. band Catherine Wheel, released in 1993 (see 1993 in music). Chrome, produced by former Pixies producer Gil Norton, has a more metallic musical edge (hence the title) than the band's previous album Ferment and EPs. Peaking at number 26 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart, the album was supported by the single "Crank", a #5 Modern Rock Tracks hit. Music videos were filmed for singles "Crank" (Quicktime excerpt: http://www.catherinewheel.com/crank.mov), "Show Me Mary" (Quicktime excerpt: http://www.catherinewheel.com/mary.mov), and "The Nude" (Quicktime excerpt: http://www.catherinewheel.com/nude.mov). The video for "Crank" featured the band playing in a hotel's elevator and lobby to a motley cast of hotel guests; "Show Me Mary" had the band being driven around in a taxi; "The Nude" featured the smearing of wet clay across a topless woman's torso. The cover photo was shot in an indoor swimming pool by Storm Thorgerson of the Hipgnosis design company. In 1999, the cover of this album appeared as the cover of the Hipgnosis/Thorgerson retrospective book Eye Of The Storm: The Album Graphics Of Storm Thorgerson (Sanctuary Publishing, 190 pgs.). The CD version was also available in a limited-edition version with a shiny chrome-looking cover with embossed writing on it.

The track "Ursa Major Space Station" was named after an obscure guitar effects pedal, but it is not known if the band used that pedal on the album. "Fripp" was named after King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp.

Catherine Wheel embarked on tours with Slowdive, Chapterhouse, and INXS, among others, to promote this album.

Track listing

  1. "Kill Rhythm" – 3:51
  2. "I Confess" – 3:56
  3. "Crank" – 3:45
  4. "Broken Head" – 4:43
  5. "Pain" – 6:31
  6. "Strange Fruit" – 3:06
  7. "Chrome" – 3:53
  8. "The Nude" – 3:51
  9. "Ursa Major Space Station" – 5:09
  10. "Fripp" – 7:34
  11. "Half Life" – 4:08
  12. "Show Me Mary" – 3:19

Personnel

Musicians
Production

 
 
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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