''The Doctor'' is the ninth studio album by
Cheap Trick, released in 1986. It was produced by
Tony Platt and reached No. 115 on the ''Billboard'' 200 Chart.
Background
Since the beginning of the 1980s, Cheap Trick saw increasing pressure from their label,
Epic Records, to produce material that was more commercial. The band achieved their first Top 40 album since 1982, with ''
Standing on the Edge'' in 1985. For that album, the band had planned on returning to the rough sound of their 1977 debut, but producer
Jack Douglas backed out of the mixing process due to the legal issues he was having with
Yoko Ono
Yoko Ono (, usually spelled in katakana as ; born February 18, 1933) is a Japanese multimedia artist, singer, songwriter, and peace activist. Her work also encompasses performance art and filmmaking.
Ono grew up in Tokyo and moved to New York ...
. Mixer
Tony Platt was called in, and as a result, the album featured keyboards and electronic drums more prominently than the band and Douglas had intended. For the follow-up album, Platt was hired as producer and he opted for the dominant use of commercial-sounding synthesizers. ''The Doctor'' was released in November 1986, but did not live up to commercial expectations. It initially sold 88,000 copies and peaked at No. 115 on the U.S. ''Billboard'' 200, remaining in the charts for nine weeks.
During the same month, the lead single "
It's Only Love" was released, but failed to enter the Billboard Hot 100 Singles Chart. Despite its commercial failure, the song's promotional video made history as the first music video to prominently use
American Sign Language
American Sign Language (ASL) is a natural language that serves as the predominant sign language of Deaf communities in the United States and most of Anglophone Canadians, Anglophone Canada. ASL is a complete and organized visual language that i ...
. "Kiss Me Red" was originally supposed to be the lead single in America, although it was released as a promotional 12" vinyl release there.
Instead of a full release in America, the song was released as a single in the Netherlands, but also failed to chart.
The album's material was mainly written by guitarist
Rick Nielsen and vocalist
Robin Zander. Although Nielsen was usually the sole songwriter during the band's early years, Zander began contributing more prominently to the songwriting since ''Standing on the Edge''. "Kiss Me Red" was the only song to be written by outside songwriters;
Billy Steinberg and
Tom Kelly. The song "Man-U-Lip-U-Lator" featured an additional writing credit to Platt, while the title track was written solely by Nielsen and became the last song to have sole credit to him on a Cheap Trick album. The demo version of the song later surfaced on the band's 1996 box set ''Sex, America, Cheap Trick'', where it was titled "Funk #9".
''The Doctor'' has gained much criticism for Platt's production. In the band's 1998 biography ''Reputation is a Fragile Thing'', the production was described as "busy" and "claustrophobic", although it was noted that the single "It's Only Love" had a more straightforward production.
Speaking to the ''
Ocala Star-Banner'', Zander later mentioned the album in relation to the departure of bassist
Tom Petersson in 1980: "We carried on because we enjoy what we do. But there was some element missing. Some of our records were so obscure that some people might have had a hard time understanding them. We do records for ourselves, and sometimes they're a little too self-indulgent. "The Doctor" was definitely too self-indulgent. We recorded that in three weeks. You can run into trouble doing that."
Nielsen, talking to ''
Phoenix New Times'' later said of "Kiss Me Red": "I think we made some dogs. I hated one song we did called "Kiss Me Red." We were almost forced to do it by the record company. We thought it was gonna be a big flop. It bombed."
Drummer
Bun E. Carlos said to the ''
Erie Times-News'' in 1997 that he didn't care for "low points" like ''The Doctor'' and ''Standing on the Edge''. Speaking to ''Punkglobe'' in 2012, he said of the album: "The production in the 80's the drums got really gimmicky, and we weren't getting along great with the record company. Jon was playing bass, so that made Cheap Trick not sound like they used to, as much. And, they aren't great records. ''The Doctor'' is just pretty much a bad 80's album. The record company would call us up and say "we gotta have keyboards on it!"
Following the album's failure, the band would make a commercial comeback with their next studio album ''
Lap of Luxury'' in 1988, which also featured the return of Petersson on bass, making ''The Doctor'' the last Cheap Trick album to feature bassist
Jon Brant. "Take Me to the Top" is the only song from ''The Doctor'' that has been performed live since promotion for the album ended. It was most notably performed acoustically at the band's 25th Anniversary concert, which was released as a CD and DVD titled ''
Silver
Silver is a chemical element; it has Symbol (chemistry), symbol Ag () and atomic number 47. A soft, whitish-gray, lustrous transition metal, it exhibits the highest electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, and reflectivity of any metal. ...
''. The show featured at least one track from each of the band's albums, and after the song finished Nielsen commented to the audience "Now who said ''The Doctor'' was a bad album? Only every critic in the United States but what do they know?"
Recording
''The Doctor'' was recorded at Park Gates Studios, Sussex, England, as well as Pierce Arrow Recorders in Evanston, Illinois, United States, and Battery Studios in London, England. It was mixed at Park Gates Studios, as well as the Power Station and Right Track Recording - both in New York City. It was mastered by George Marino at Sterling Sound in New York City. According to Zander, the album took three weeks to record.
In an early 1986 interview with ''MTVs Alan Hunter, Nielsen mentioned that the band had just recorded the song "
Mighty Wings" for the ''
Top Gun'' soundtrack, and were getting ready for the upcoming recording of ''The Doctor''. He revealed: "We're doing another album, our 12th album, we're doing it with Tony Platt, the guy who mixed our last record. We're gonna record the basic tracks in the mid-West, and then we're gonna go to England and mix over there, and do the guitars and vocals. We just finished a song in the studio last night with Harold Faltermeyer, recording a song for his movie called ''Top Gun'' which has Tom Cruise in it, and so the song we did was called "Mighty Wings". We didn't write it but we did it, and it sounds pretty cool. That's coming out this summer."
During the recording of the album, a number of demos were also recorded. Three of these, "Money Is the Route of All Fun," "Fortune Cookie" and "Funk #9" later appeared on the 1996 box-set ''Sex, America, Cheap Trick''. Two numbers remain officially unreleased; "Temptation" and "Dance to the Drummer", while an alternate version of the album track "Name of the Game" appeared on a ''Trickfest II'' prize cassette. "Money Is the Route of All Fun" featured
Roy Wood of
The Move
The Move were a British Rock music, rock band formed in Birmingham in 1965. They scored nine Top 40, top 20 UK singles in five years, but were among the most popular British bands not to find any real success in the United States. For most of ...
.
Release
The album was released by Epic on vinyl, CD and cassette in America, and on vinyl in the UK, Europe and Canada. In addition to the main cassette release, a promotional-only cassette was released in America, which featured alternative, exclusive artwork. A long-box version of the CD release was also released.
After its original release, the album was out-of-print for many years, making the original pressing of the CD a collectors' item. The first Japanese CD was released in 2003. Wounded Bird Records later re-released the album on CD in America in 2010. The release included one bonus track; "It's Only Love (Single Version)". The album was also included on the box-set ''The Complete Epic Albums Collection'', which featured all of the band's albums from 1977 up to 1990's ''
Busted''. For the set, ''The Doctor'' was remastered and presented in a mini vinyl replica.
Promotion
The band embarked on a tour during late 1986 and early 1987 in America. On the tour, the band performed a few new songs from the album: "It's Up to You," "Rearview Mirror Romance," "Are You Lonely Tonight," "Kiss Me Red," and "It's Only Love". The song "Mighty Wings" was also played live during this time. On the tour, Nielsen used a custom-made ''The Doctor'' guitar, which he continued to occasionally use at concerts into the late 1980s. The guitar also featured in the "It's Only Love" music video. It was made by
Jim Morahan of Morahan Custom Guitars.
During promotion of the album, the band performed live on the American TV show ''The Rock 'n' Roll Evening News''. The band performed the tracks "It's Only Love", "Kiss Me Red" and their 1979 classic hit single "
I Want You to Want Me". On the show Nielsen wore a jumper with the album's title, while Zander wore the same outfit and used the same guitar as he used in the music video of "It's Only Love".
Upon release, ''
Spin'' featured an advert for the album. Headed: "Get a powerful injection of Cheap Trick!", the advert said: "''The Doctor'' rocks you with a healthy dose of Cheap Trick. Ten pulse-pounding tracks that'll have you on your feet in no time! Featuring the potent first single and video "It's Only Love", plus "Kiss Me Red" and "Are You Lonely Tonight". Listen to "The Doctor" and get maximum-strength rock from Cheap Trick; a name you can trust."
Critical reception
Upon release, ''
Cash Box
''Cashbox'', also known as ''Cash Box'', is an American music industry trade magazine, originally published weekly from July 1942 to November 1996. Ten years after its dissolution, it was revived and continues as ''Cashbox Magazine'', an online ...
'' said: "Like Heart last year, it's time to think seriously about a huge comeback record for Cheap Trick. ''The Doctor'' could be it. Cheap Trick's zany teen appeal has coalesced into a modern rock vision with its roots in hard pop. The Tony Platt/Paul Klingberg mix gives the record a cool, contemporary edge and the songs are some of Rick Nielsen's and Robin Zander's best."
[Cash Box newspaper - 4 October 1986 - Album Releases - page 8] ''
Billboard'' noted that "It's Up to You" and "It's Only Love" were "top single contenders".
[Billboard magazine - 4 October 1986 - Reviews: Albums - page 78] Jim Higgins of ''
The Milwaukee Sentinel'' commented: "''The Doctor'' is superficially similar to the band's finest recordings, ''Live at Budokan'', ''Heaven Tonight'' and ''In Color''. All are collections of simple hard rock songs with Beatles-like harmonies and plenty of Nielsen guitar playing. But ''The Doctor'' lacks the spark of brilliance that infused the better albums."
Steven Wine of ''
Spokane Chronicle
The ''Spokane Daily Chronicle'' is a daily digital newspaper in Spokane, Washington. It was founded as a weekly paper in 1881 and grew into an afternoon daily, competing with '' The Spokesman-Review'', which was formed from the merger of two c ...
'' wrote: "Cheap Trick's early albums were fun because the band produced a heavy sound with a light touch. No more. Layers of keyboards and programmed drums bury Rick Nielsen's high-voltage guitar style and Bun E. Carlos' propulsive drumming. ''The Doctor'' is not without merit. Nielsen and singer Robin Zander know a thing or two about songwriting, and every cut on Side 1 has a soaring melody. Unfortunately, the building momentum mistracks on the side's final song, "Name of the Game," which sounds like a Foreigner reject. It's all downhill on Side 2. The topic throughout is love, and not even "Rearview Mirror Romance" has anything interesting to say about it. Cheap Trick needs to rediscover its sense of humor and four-track tape recorder."
Kevin Davis of ''
Fort Lauderdale News'' said: "Cheap Trick fans will be glad to know the band is still the same loud, hard-rocking, guitar-driven trio that first became popular almost 10 years ago. The band packs a lot of that early energy in their latest album, ''The Doctor''. The album does have some clever songs such as "Rearview Mirror Romance", a solid guitar-heavy tune about falling in love with a strange driver. ''The Doctor'' contains no extraordinary material or ground-breaking work from Cheap Trick, but instead works on their usual formula - basic hard rock."
[Fort Lauderdale News - Album Reviews - 2 November 1986 - page 121]
In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of
AllMusic
AllMusic (previously known as All-Music Guide and AMG) is an American online database, online music database. It catalogs more than three million album entries and 30 million tracks, as well as information on Musical artist, musicians and Mus ...
said: "If any one record sums up all the ludicrous indulgence of '80s record-making it's ''The Doctor''. Cluttered with cacophonic electronic drums and clanking with cheap overdriven synths, the record is cavernous and hollow, every instrument echoing endlessly in a fathomless digital stage. As sonic archaeology, this holds some interest, as it contains every bad record production idea of the mid-'80s - it's as garish as its record cover." Erlewine recommended "It's Up to You" and "Good Girls Go to Heaven (Bad Girls Go Everywhere)" by highlighting them as AMG Track Picks.
Track listing
Outtakes and demos
* "Money Is the Route of All Fun" (featuring
Roy Wood of
The Move
The Move were a British Rock music, rock band formed in Birmingham in 1965. They scored nine Top 40, top 20 UK singles in five years, but were among the most popular British bands not to find any real success in the United States. For most of ...
, available on the ''
Sex, America, Cheap Trick'' box set)
* "Fortune Cookie" (demo) (available on the ''Sex, America, Cheap Trick'' box set)
* "Funk #9" (The Doctor demo) (available on the ''Sex, America, Cheap Trick'' box set)
* "Name of the Game" (alternate version) (appeared on a ''Trickfest II'' prize cassette)
* "Temptation" (officially unreleased)
* "Dance to the Drummer" (officially unreleased)
* "
Mighty Wings," the end-cut track to the film ''
Top Gun'' was recorded during the demo sessions.
Personnel
Cheap Trick
*
Robin Zander – vocals
*
Rick Nielsen – guitar
*
Jon Brant – bass
*
Bun E. Carlos – drums
Additional musicians
* Dee Lewis, Coral Gordon – backing vocals (tracks 5–6, 9–10)
* Paul Klingberg – keyboards, sequencers
Production
*
Tony Platt – producer, mixing, programming
* Paul Klingberg – engineer, mixing
* Jason Corsaro – mixing (tracks 6–8)
*
George Marino – mastering
Other
*
Andre Miripolsky – cover artwork
* Ria Lewerke – art direction, design
* Mac James – design
* Veronica Sim – photography
Charts
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Doctor, The
Cheap Trick albums
1986 albums
Epic Records albums
Albums produced by Tony Platt