Repercussion (The DB's Album)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Repercussion'' is the second studio album by American
power pop Power pop (also typeset as powerpop) is a subgenre of rock music and form of pop rock based on the early music of bands such as the Who, the Beatles, the Beach Boys, and the Byrds. It typically incorporates melodic hooks, vocal harmonies, ...
band
the dB's The dB's are an American alternative Rock music, rock and power pop group, who formed in New York City in 1978 and first came to prominence in the early 1980s. Their debut album ''Stands for Decibels'' is acclaimed as one of the great "lost" pow ...
, released in 1981 by Albion Records. Like its predecessor, ''
Stands for Decibels ''Stands for Decibels'' is the debut studio album by American power pop band the dB's, released January 15, 1981 by Albion Records. The album was commercially unsuccessful but critically acclaimed. At the time of its release, the dB's consisted ...
'', the album was commercially unsuccessful but critically acclaimed. This was the band's final album with the original lineup, as Chris Stamey left in early April 1982.


Background and production

Stamey and Peter Holsapple, the band's dual singers/guitarists, each ended up contributing six songs on the album. As was the case on their debut, Stamey's songs veered towards more experimental melodies and rhythms, while Holsapple's songs were more traditionally in a pop vein. The album was produced by Scott Litt (later famous for his association with the band R.E.M. and for remixing Nirvana's album '' In Utero''), giving it a "fuller, more modern overall sound". The first track, Holsapple's "Living a Lie", featured a horn section, the Rumour Brass. Stamey's "ridiculously catchy" song "Ask for Jill" was about the process of mastering an album. Holsapple's composition "Amplifier" (about a suicidal man reflecting on how his significant other left him and took all his belongings, save for the titular object) became the band's lead single and also their first video. "Amplifier" was later rerecorded and included on the band's next album, '' Like This''. The original version was later included on Rhino Records' box set '' Left of the Dial: Dispatches from the '80s Underground''. A video for the second single, "Neverland", was completed but went unreleased until the band uploaded it to their website in 2008.


Reception

Robert Palmer of ''
The New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'' praised ''Repercussion'', arguing that it proves "the excellence of the group's first album was no fluke" and that ''Repercussion'' was "a more consistent, more mature piece of work" than its predecessor. He then hailed the band as "one of the most resourceful and inventive pop-rock bands making records and performing," writing that "the dB's are out to prove that pop songs can carry as much emotional freight as hard rock or blues-based numbers, and they prove it brilliantly."


Track listing

Side 1 # "Living a Lie" – 3:26 ( Peter Holsapple) # "We Were Happy There" – 2:39 (Holsapple) # "Happenstance" – 4:07 (Chris Stamey) # "From a Window" – 2:34 (Stamey) # "Amplifier" – 3:08 (Holsapple) # "Ask for Jill" – 2:33 (Stamey) Side 2 #
  • "I Feel Good (Today)" – 4:28 (Stamey) # "Storm Warning" – 2:32 (Holsapple) # "Ups and Downs" – 3:03 (Stamey) # "Nothing Is Wrong" – 4:16 (Holsapple) # "In Spain" – 3:02 (Stamey) # "Neverland" – 2:46 (Holsapple) Different versions of the album have been reissued on CD with different bonus tracks, usually either Holsapple's instrumental B-side "PH Factor" or Stamey's "Soul Kiss".


    Personnel


    The dB's

    * Chris Stamey – guitar, vocals * Peter Holsapple – guitar, vocals *Gene Holder – bass guitar * Will Rigby – drums


    Additional musicians

    * Andy Clark – additional keyboards * The Rumour Brass: **Chris Gower – trombone **Dick Hansen – trumpet ** John "Irish" Earle – saxophones


    References

    {{Authority control 1982 albums Albums produced by Scott Litt The dB's albums I.R.S. Records albums