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XO

 

  • Artist: Elliott Smith
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: August 25, 1998
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

A year before his major-label debut, XO, was released, it seemed unlikely that Elliott Smith would even be on a major, let alone having his record be one of the more anticipated releases of 1998. He had certainly earned a great deal of critical respect with his low-key, acoustic indie records and was emerging as a respected songwriter, but he hadn't made much of an impression outside of journalists, record collectors, and indie rockers. An Oscar nomination can change things, however. "Miss Misery," one of Smith's elegantly elegiac songs for Gus Van Sant's Good Will Hunting, unexpectedly earned an Academy Award nomination, and he was immediately thrust into the spotlight. He was reluctant to embrace instant celebrity, yet he didn't refuse a contract with DreamWorks, and he didn't shy away from turning XO into a glorious fruition of his talents. Smith's songs remain intensely introspective, yet the lush, Beatlesque production provides a terrifically charming counterpoint. His sweetly dark melodies are vividly brought to life with the detailed arrangements, and they sell Smith's tormented songs -- it's easy to get caught up in the tunes and the sound of the record, then realize later what the songs are actually about. That's a sign of a good craftsman, and XO proves that not only can Elliott Smith craft a song, but he knows how to make an alluring pop record as well. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Sweet Adeline (Lyrics) Elliott Smith, Henry W. Armstrong Elliott Smith (3:15)
Tomorrow Tomorrow (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (3:07)
Waltz #2 (XO) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (4:40)
Baby Britain (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (3:13)
Pitseleh (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (3:22)
Independence Day (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (3:04)
Bled White (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (3:22)
Waltz #1 (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (3:22)
Amity (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (2:20)
Oh Well, Okay (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (2:33)
Bottle up and Explode! (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (2:58)
A Question Mark Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (2:41)
Everybody Cares, Everybody Understands (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (4:25)
I Didn't Understand (Lyrics) Elliott Smith Elliott Smith (2:17)

Credits

Rob Schnapf (Producer), Richard Barron (Assistant Engineer), Elliott Smith (Engineer), Rob Schnapf (Mixing), Joey Waronker (Drums), Bruce Eskovitz (Flute), Monique Rozendaal (Production Coordination), James Atkinson (French Horn), Farhad Behroozi (Strings), Larry Crane (Mixing), Tom Halm (Horn Arrangements), Luke Wood (A&R), Rob Schnapf (Engineer), Elliott Smith (String Arrangements), Stephen Marcussen (Mastering), Eric Matthies (Photography), Elliott Smith (Horn Arrangements), Shelly Berg (String Arrangements), Tom Rothrock (Mixing), Henry Ferber (Strings), Rob Schnapf (Guitar), Jon Brion (Chamberlin), Larry Crane (Engineer), Tom Rothrock (Engineer), Roy Poper (Trumpet), Bruce Eskovitz (Bass), Shelly Berg (Horn Arrangements), Doug Boehm (Assistant Engineer), Elliott Smith (Producer), Jerrod Goodman (Strings), Elliott Smith (Mixing), Tom Rothrock (Drum Loop), Pamela Dealmeida (Strings), Larry Crane (Producer), Tom Halm (String Arrangements), Bruce Eskovitz (Sax (Baritone)), Tom Rothrock (Producer), Alan Sanderson (Assistant Engineer), Peter Hatch (Strings)
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Wikipedia: XO (album)
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XO
Studio album by Elliott Smith
Released August 25, 1998
Recorded 1997–1998 at Sunset Sound Recorders, The Sound Factory, Ocean Way Recording, and Sonora Studios in Los Angeles, California except for "Amity" recorded at Jackpot! Studios in Portland, Oregon
Genre Indie rock
Length 44:46
Label DreamWorks Records
Producer Tom Rothrock
Rob Schnapf
Elliott Smith
Professional reviews
Elliott Smith chronology
Either/Or
(1997)
XO
(1998)
Figure 8
(2000)

XO is the name of the fourth album recorded by American singer-songwriter Elliott Smith. Smith's first work on a major label, it was released by DreamWorks Records on August 25, 1998. Bong Load Custom Records released it on vinyl LP, which has since gone out of print. Vinyl copies of XO remained rare until a re-release by Plain Records in 2008. The album is also available as digital download.

The singles from XO were "Waltz #2 (XO)" and "Baby Britain". An early working title for the album was Grand Mal. Smith recorded numerous songs during the XO sessions that did not make it to the album.

Matthew LeMay has written a book about XO as part of the 33⅓ series, released on April 6, 2009 by the Continuum International Publishing Group.

Contents

Track listing

All songs written by Elliott Smith.

  1. "Sweet Adeline" – 3:15
  2. "Tomorrow Tomorrow" – 3:07
  3. "Waltz #2 (XO)" – 4:40
  4. "Baby Britain" – 3:13
  5. "Pitseleh" – 3:22
  6. "Independence Day" – 3:04
  7. "Bled White" – 3:22
  8. "Waltz #1" – 3:22
  9. "Amity" – 2:20
  10. "Oh Well, Okay" – 2:33
  11. "Bottle Up and Explode!" – 2:58
  12. "A Question Mark" – 2:41
  13. "Everybody Cares, Everybody Understands" – 4:25
  14. "I Didn't Understand" – 2:17

Available on CD, cassette and LP. A DreamWorks release.

Recorded at Sunset Sound, The Sound Factory, Ocean Way and Sonora, Los Angeles, CA, except "Baby Britain" and "Amity" which were recorded at Jackpot! Studios, Portland, OR.

Strings and horns arranged by Elliott Smith with Tom Halm and Shelly Berg.

Sleeve by Johnson and Wolverton, Portland, OR. Photographs by Eric Matthies.

Trivia

The title of the first track, "Sweet Adeline", was inspired by Smith's recollections of his grandmother singing in her glee club, Sweet Adelines International.[1]

"Amity" was named after a friend who can be seen in photographs from Smith's 1997 tour.[2]

Musicians

Outtakes, B-sides, and non-album tracks

The following tracks were recorded during the XO sessions but ultimately did not make the album:

Officially released

  • "Miss Misery" - Featured on the Good Will Hunting soundtrack.
  • "Our Thing" - Featured on the "Waltz #2 (XO)" single. According to Larry Crane, "I'm pretty sure Quasi backs him on this."
  • "Waltz #1" (Demo) - According to Larry Crane, "the version released is same as the Jackpot! demos version. There were no rough or final mixes, just the one! Never titled 'I Wish'! It did have a temp title as 'Bushmills'!"
  • "Cecilia/Amanda" (XO sessions version) - Released by Kill Rock Stars as a free download on occasion of Roman Candle and From a Basement on a Hill being added to their catalog on April 6th, 2010. Recorded at Jackpot! Recording Studio in 1997 by Larry Crane. An earlier version of this song was initially written and recorded by Elliott's high school band, Stranger Than Fiction, and was known as "Time is Ours Now". "Cecilia/Amanda" is a reworking of that song with almost completely different lyrics.

Posthumously released

  • "First Timer" - Featured on New Moon (later renamed and re-recorded as "From a Poisoned Well").
  • "Miss Misery" (early version) - Featured on New Moon.

Unofficially released

  • "A Silver Chain" - instrumental version; no vocals were ever recorded on the master from Jackpot!, although the song was played live with vocals.
  • "A Question Mark" - alternate instrumental version.
  • "Bled White" - alternate version.
  • "Everybody Cares, Everybody Understands" - alternate version.
  • "Division Day" - alternate version.
  • "I Didn't Understand" - alternate version.
  • "Taking a Fall"
  • "Instrumental No. 2 (Waltz)"
  • "Grand Mal" (two versions appear to have been recorded; at the end of this surfaced version, Smith comments that it is too fast)

Unreleased

  • "Brand New Game" – the process of recording this song at Jackpot! Studios after XO was recorded can be seen briefly in Strange Parallel. This song would be attempted again during the Figure 8 and From a Basement on the Hill sessions.
  • "Rock #1" (may be a working title for another XO-era song)
  • "Echo Park"
  • "Grand Mal" (two versions appear to have been recorded; the reel of this recording has "slow version" written on it)
  • "Piano Thing" (may be a working title for another XO-era song)
  • "Tom's Start" (also known as "Back in the Day") - Later renamed as "Happiness" (with added instrumentation and tracking), which was included on Smith's next album, Figure 8.
  • "True Believer" - instrumental

References

  1. ^ S. R. Shutt (2000-05-16). "Biography". Sweet Adeline. pp. 2. http://www.sweetadeline.net/bio2.html. Retrieved 2007-06-20. 
  2. ^ Nugent, Benjamin (2004). Elliott Smith and the Big Nothing. Da Capo Press. pp. 111. ISBN 0-306-81393-9. 

 
 

 

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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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