Clocking Out Is For Suckers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clocking Out Is For Suckers | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Drake Tungsten | |||||
Released | 1994 | ||||
Recorded | 1991-1994 | ||||
Genre | Indie rock | ||||
Length | 32:49 | ||||
Label | Self-Released | ||||
Producer | Britt Daniel | ||||
Drake Tungsten chronology | |||||
|
Clocking Out Is For Suckers is Drake Tungsten's first album,[1] released in 1994 on cassette only and distributed to the Austin, Texas area.[2] Many of the tracks were re-recorded and re-released on later Spoon albums.
Contents |
[edit] Tracklisting
- "15 Credibility Street" - 2:49
- "Chicago at Night" - 3:13
- "Let Me Roll It!!" - 2:58
- "All the Negatives Have Been Destroyed" - 2:43
- "Interview 1" - 0:39
- "Do The Manta Ray" - 2:04
- "I Could Be Underground" - 1:03
- "Taking My Piss Out" - 1:38
- "Yeah Oh Yeah Oh Yeah" - 1:07
- "[untitled]" - 1:39
- "Interview 2" - 1:27
- "I Can't Believe That Kurt Cobain Is Dead" - 1:43
- "Secrets" - 2:39
- "Dismember" - 1:48
- "I Wanted To Be Your Friend" - 1:51
- "Call Me When You Come Home" - 0:40
- "Are You Part Of The Movement?" - 2:48
[edit] Notes
- "Let Me Roll It" is a Paul McCartney and Wings cover from Band on the Run.
- "Interview 1" was between Britt and his little brother, who was 7 years old.
- "Do the Manta Ray" is an instrumental Pixies cover of "Dancing the Manta Ray", which appears as a b-side on the "Monkey Gone To Heaven" single.
- "Secrets" was originally written by The Cure.
- Different versions of "Chicago at Night" later appear on Six Pence for the Sauces and also on Spoon's third LP, Girls Can Tell.
- Different versions of "I Could Be Underground" later appear on Six Pence for the Sauces and on Spoon's 30 Gallon Tank EP.
- "All the Negatives Have Been Destroyed", "Dismember", and "I Wanted To Be Your Friend" all appear later on Spoon's Telephono.
[edit] References
- ^ Mike DaRonco, "Drake Tungsten Biography", All Music Guide, retrieved March 11, 2008.
- ^ Raoul Hernandez, "Drake Tungsten and His Boy Skellington." The Austin Chronicle, January 25, 1999.
[edit] External links
- Media related to Drake Tungsten from the Wikimedia Commons.
- Peek-A-Boo Records: Drake Tungsten page
- Spoon Official Website