- Gretchen Goes to Nebraska
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Gretchen Goes to Nebraska Studio album by King's X Released June 27, 1989 Recorded Rampart Studios, Houston TX Genre Hard rock, progressive metal Length 52:20 Label Megaforce Producer Sam Taylor & King's X Professional reviews The reviews parameter has been deprecated. Please move reviews into the “Reception” section of the article. See Moving reviews into article space.
- Allmusic link
- Rolling Stone 10/19/89
- Q 5/95, p.126
King's X chronology Out of the Silent Planet
(1988)Gretchen Goes to Nebraska
(1989)Faith, Hope, Love
(1990)Gretchen Goes to Nebraska is the second studio album by American heavy metal/hard rock trio King's X. It is a concept album based around a short story written by drummer Jerry Gaskill.[1] Having received strong critical praise and fan support, Gretchen Goes to Nebraska is considered among the best work of King's X.
Contents
Music and lyrics
Characteristic of the band's early material, Gretchen Goes to Nebraska features various lyrical Christian themes in tracks such as "Over My Head" but also criticism of televangelism in "Mission." It further questions religion with reference to the sentencing of Galileo Galilei in "Pleiades." Musically, the album covers various styles; it emphasizes tight melodies and grooves while incorporating elements of gospel and psychedelia.
When asked about the truth behind the album's title, drummer Jerry Gaskill responded in a 1990 interview:
- "It actually started as a joke. Six or seven years ago we were unloading the truck, and we were throwing out these silly album titles and one of our roadies just came out with that off the top of his head. So we jest said 'Yeah, someday we're going to call an album that'. We just saw him on our last tour, and we told him, 'we named the album because you said that'; he didn't even remember it."[2]
Touring and promotion
King's X toured considerably in promotion of their second album. The band's second London, England performance at the Astoria was filmed via camcorder. In 2008, nearly twenty years after its recording, the sold out concert would be released on a DVD entitled Gretchen Goes to London. According to frontman Doug Pinnick, after the concert, a distressed Jerry Gaskill locked himself in a room, thinking he may have ruined the band's career. Despite this, Pinnick described the show as "real encouraging."[3]
In keeping with current concert trends, in late 2009, the band expressed interest in performing Gretchen Goes to Nebraska in its entirety on tour. Pinnick elaborated, "We like the idea of doing the whole of that record with a great light show, as part of something we’d call An Evening With King’s X. It wouldn’t be a full-blown tour, playing every hell-hole for three months. But we’d select specific, quality venues, make it special for the fans."[4]
The song "Over My Head," a soulful, metal groove, and the power ballad "Summerland" both had promotional music videos. The album's cover artwork is seen at the end of the latter video. "Over My Head" would become a fan favorite and concert staple.
Track listing
All songs written and composed by Pinnick, Tabor, Gaskill, except where noted.
No. Title Length 1. "Out of the Silent Planet" 5:44 2. "Over My Head" 4:47 3. "Summerland" 3:17 4. "Everybody Knows a Little Bit of Something" 3:57 5. "The Difference (In the Garden of St. Anne's-on-the-Hill)" 3:08 6. "I'll Never Be the Same" (Pinnick, Tabor, Gaskill, and Marty Warren) 4:56 7. "Mission" 5:01 8. "Fall on Me" 4:05 9. "Pleiades" (Pinnick, Tabor, Gaskill, and Dale Richardson) 4:41 10. "Don't Believe It (It's Easier Said Than Done)" 3:07 11. "Send a Message" 4:02 12. "The Burning Down" 5:35 Critical reception
Gretchen Goes to Nebraska received virtually universal critical praise for its uniquely progressive musical approach and varied styles. Allmusic's Eduardo Rivadavia named it an AMG Album Pick, noting that it tops its "brilliant" predecessor by "taking their unique sound to unprecedented heights of invention and inspiration." Major publications such as Rolling Stone and Q also offered strong praise. Gretchen Goes to Nebraska also achieved high slots on various Albums of the Year lists, including #4 in Kerrang!.
Accolades
Publication Country Accolade Year Rank Kerrang! United Kingdom "Albums of the Year"[5] 1989 4 Tip Germany "Albums of the Year" (Henning Richter)[6] 1989 8 OOR Netherlands "Albums of the Year"[7] 1989 18 Sounds United Kingdom "Albums of the Year"[8] 1989 38 OOR Netherlands "The Best Albums of the 80s"[9] 1989 244 Hard Rock Magazine France "The Best Albums of the 80s"[9] 1989 1 Personnel
- Doug Pinnick – lead vocals, bass
- Ty Tabor – guitar, vocals
- Jerry Gaskill – drums, vocals
Chart performance
Chart Peak UK Albums Chart 52 [10] U.S. Billboard 200 123 [11] External links
Footnotes
- ^ Gasskill, Jerry Gretchen Goes To Nebraska JerryGaskill.com. Retrieved on April 16, 2007.
- ^ Caughey, Dave King's X: The mainstream rock band who fuse metal attack with celtic-tinged U2-isms Cross Rhythms (July 1, 1990). Retrieved on 1-15-11.
- ^ MFA Interview with Dug Pinnick of King's X MammasFallenAngels.com (December 16, 2009). Retrieved on 1-15-11.
- ^ King's X Taking Gretchen Back to Nebraska WeWillRockYouBlog.com (November 25, 2009). Retrieved on 1-15-11.
- ^ "Kerrang! - Albums of the Year". Kerrang!. http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/kerrang.html#1989. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "Tip - Albums of the Year". AcclaimedMusic.net. http://www.poplist.de/poplist.php?category=tip_k. Retrieved 2008-04-16.
- ^ "OOR - Albums of the Year". OOR. http://www.muzieklijstjes.nl/1989.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "Sounds - Albums of the Year". AcclaimedMusic.net. http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/sounds.html#1989. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ a b "OOR - The Best Albums of the 80s". OOR. http://www.muzieklijstjes.nl/1989.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ [1], UK charts page for King's X
- ^ "King's X album charts [albums]". Billboard. http://www.billboard.com/#/artist/king-s-x/chart-history/4997?sort=date. Retrieved 2007-12-20.
Studio albums Out of the Silent Planet · Gretchen Goes to Nebraska · Faith, Hope, Love · King's X · Dogman · Ear Candy · Tape Head · Please Come Home... Mr. Bulbous · Manic Moonlight · Black Like Sunday · Ogre Tones · XVLive albums Compilations Independent releases Singles "King" · "Shot of Love" · "Over My Head" · "Summerland" · "It's Love" · "I'll Never Get Tired of You" · "We Are Finding Who We Are" · "Black Flag" · "Dogman" · "Fool You" · "A Box" · "Sometime" · "Fade" · "Go Tell Somebody"Related articles Categories:- King's X albums
- 1989 albums
- Concept albums
- Megaforce Records albums
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