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To Record Only Water for Ten Days

 
Album Review: To Record Only Water for Ten Days

  • Artist: John Frusciante
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: February 13, 2001
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

With the opening kick of a simple but loud drum machine beat and multiple full-throttle guitar wails over the top, it quickly becomes apparent that John Frusciante has also given a swift kick to his heroin addiction. Hard drugs left the Red Hot Chili Peppers' guitarist derailed, deranged, and near death before an L.A. Weekly reporter detailed his frail state in a chilling story, moving some friends to help Frusciante check into a rehab center. He got off drugs and rejoined the Peppers in time to help Californication become a critical and popular success in 1999. In his time off from the band, however, Frusciante released two solo records, which he later admitted were made for drug money. Niandra LaDes and Usually Just a T-Shirt and Smile From the Streets You Hold displayed an intriguingly dark departure from the Peppers' polished funky punk. The scratchy and naked lo-fi ramblings reveled in the art of voyeuristic discomfort. And while some of the results displayed intense, edge-teetering freakouts, ragged beauty, or bleak intelligence -- celebrating the idea that the process and development of a song can sometimes be just as engaging as the "finished" product -- others simply unraveled into crumbs of little or no value. To Record Only Water for Ten Days, however, is made up of 15 "legitimate" songs. The whole is still quite simple -- stellar guitar work, impressive vocal range, drum machine, and minimal effects -- but it's a much healthier and "together" sound. Still a departure from the Peppers, To Record has an overall almost goth-like singer/songwriter vibe, at times colliding into rock catharsis. But Frusciante hasn't forgotten his shaky past, utilizing similarly abstract and slightly disturbed lyricism: "Where you go doesn't matter/Cuz there will come a time/When time goes out the window/And you'll learn to drive out of focus/I'm you and if anything unfolds/It's supposed to." Although most fans will no doubt be relieved that Frusciante has pieced his life back together, appreciators of the "falling apart" aspect of his past work might be disappointed by To Record's more accessible, less collapsible sturdiness. Even the look of the record is excessively clean, with a simple two-color design and all-caps block letters. ~ Melissa Giannini, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Going Inside John Frusciante John Frusciante (3:36)
Someone's John Frusciante John Frusciante (1:52)
The First Season John Frusciante John Frusciante (4:13)
Wind Up Space John Frusciante John Frusciante (1:59)
Away & Anywhere John Frusciante John Frusciante (4:07)
Remain John Frusciante John Frusciante (3:57)
Fallout John Frusciante John Frusciante (2:10)
Ramparts John Frusciante John Frusciante (1:11)
With No One John Frusciante John Frusciante (3:32)
Murderers John Frusciante John Frusciante (2:41)
Invisible Movement John Frusciante John Frusciante (2:21)
Representing John Frusciante John Frusciante (1:46)
In Rime John Frusciante John Frusciante (2:13)
Saturation John Frusciante John Frusciante (3:03)
Moments Have You John Frusciante John Frusciante (3:29)

Credits

Lawrence Azerrad (Design), Vladimir Meller (Mastering), Jimmy Boyle (Mixing), John Frusciante (Producer), Lawrence Azerrad (Art Assistant)
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Wikipedia: To Record Only Water for Ten Days
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To Record Only Water for Ten Days
Studio album by John Frusciante
Released February 13, 2001
Genre Experimental rock, psychedelic rock
Length 42:20
Label Warner Music Group
Producer John Frusciante
Professional reviews
John Frusciante chronology
Smile from the Streets You Hold
(1997)
To Record Only Water for Ten Days
(2001)
From The Sounds Inside
(2001)

To Record Only Water for Ten Days is the third solo album by John Frusciante, released in 2001 through Warner Music Group. Unlike his previous two solo albums, Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt and Smile from the Streets You Hold, the record differs significantly in that Frusciante explores elements of electronica, synthpop and New Wave. It was recorded subsequent to his heroin addiction.[1] Following a month in rehab for his addiction and his rejoining the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Frusciante felt deeply connected to the spiritual plane and was inspired by the many visions he had of spirits; the ideology of recording water for ten days refers to ten separate periods of time in which an album is conceived. The lyrics express this theme and deal mostly with philosophical and spiritual matters as well as delving into his usual brand of psychedelia-tinged personalism. It reached #30 on Heatseekers. Vincent Gallo directed a video for every track on the record. "Murderers" is featured in the segment Invisible Boards of the skateboarding home video Yeah Right!.

Frusciante's main influences for this album were 1980s synthpop, post-punk and electronica bands that did their own programming, including bands such as Depeche Mode and New Order.

Contents

Track listing

All tracks written by John Frusciante.

  1. "Going Inside" – 3:36
  2. "Someone's" – 1:52
  3. "The First Season" – 4:13
  4. "Wind Up Space" – 1:59
  5. "Away and Anywhere" – 4:09
  6. "Remain" – 3:57
  7. "Fallout" – 2:10
  8. "Ramparts" – 1:11
  9. "With No One" – 3:32
  10. "Murderers" – 2:41
  11. "Invisible Movement" – 2:21
  12. "Representing" – 1:46
  13. "In Rime" – 2:13
  14. "Saturation" – 3:03
  15. "Moments Have You" – 3:30
  16. "Resolution" - 2:46 (Japanese release only bonus track)

Personnel

  • Lawrence Azerrad – design, art assistant
  • Jimmy Boyle – mixing
  • Vladimir Meler – mastering

Non-album tracks

Dozens of songs were recorded for the album but left off. The following have been released in some form:

Officially released B-Sides and non-album tracks

  • "Beginning Again", "Leave All The Days Behind", "Resolution", "So Would've I", "Time is Nothing", "The Last Hymn"

Officially released tracks from johnfrusciante.com

(Note: Most of these tracks were NOT titled by John, but by fans. As of now, the official titles are unknown. Also, most tracks remain unfinished or unmixed.)

  • "Beginning Again" (rough mix), "Dying (I Don't Mind)", "Fallout" (rough mix), "Fallout" (alternate version), "How High", "Interstate Sex", "I Go Through These Walls", "I Will Always Be Beat Down", "Leave All the Days Behind (entitled "Cut Myself Out" here), "Leaving You", "Murmur", "Nature Falls", "Place to Drive", "Penetrate Time (AKA Lou Bergs)", "Sailing Outdoors", "Slow Down", "So Would Have I" (rough mix), "The Battle of Time", "Three Thoughts", "With Love",

Unofficially released rough mixes

  • "Moments Have You" (rough mix), "Representing" (rough mix), "Resolution" (rough mix), "The First Seasons" (rough mix), "Time is Nothing" (rough mix), "Someone's" (rough mix), "Wind Up Space" (rough mix), "With No One" (rough mix)

Unofficially released tracks

(Note: All of these tracks were NOT titled by John, but by fans. As of now, the official titles are unknown. Also, most tracks remain unfinished or unmixed.)

  • "All We Have", "Back and Forth (To the Sun)", "Drift Down", "Every Light Will Burn", "Fill My Nights", "Instrumental", "Untitled 2000"

References

  1. ^ Interview, "John Frusciante - Water Music". Rock Sound Magazine, February 2001.

External links


 
 

 

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