Pacer (album)

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Pacer

Pacer album cover
Studio album by The Amps
Released October 1995
Recorded 1995
Genre Pop, Rock[1]
Length 33:47
Label 4AD (UK), Elektra (US)

Pacer is an album released in October 1995 by the Amps, Kim Deal's side project from her group the Breeders, who took a break from playing together beginning in late 1994. Deal recruited two new musicians and named the group the Amps. The band recorded Pacer at several studios in the USA and in Ireland, with different engineers each time, including Steve Albini, Bryce Goggin, and John Agnello.

The album received mixed reviews, ranging from highly enthusiastic to quite dismissive. Despite radio airplay for its single, "Tipp City", Pacer did not sell well. The Amps toured in 1995 and 1996 with groups such as Sonic Youth, Guided By Voices, and Foo Fighters. In 1996, Deal changed the band's name back to the Breeders, making Pacer the Amps' only album.

Background

Kim Deal's band the Breeders released Last Splash in August 1993;[2] the album was very successful, and its release was followed by much touring.[3] The Breeders then took an extended break from activity.[3] One reason was that Deal's sister Kelley, who was also in the group, was arrested on drug charges in November 1994.[4] Member Josephine Wiggs likewise took time away from the band, although Wiggs and Deal have different memories of the circumstances surrounding this.[5] Wiggs recalls offering to be involved if Deal's next album was going to be a Breeders record, but having the impression that Deal wanted to do a solo release; Deal remembers Wiggs declining to be part of any immediate Breeders' recording, but offering to be on the one after that.[5]

Regardless of the causes of the Breeders' hiatus, by early 1995 Deal believed her next album would be a solo one, and at first intended to play all instruments on it herself.[6] Back at her home in Dayton, Ohio, she practiced the drums and initially prepared six songs for recording. Around the same time, she produced some tracks for Guided by Voices at Easley Studios in Memphis, Tennessee.[4] While there, Deal used a portion of the studio time to record demos for some of her new songs.[4] As an attempt to distract her sister from her drug problems, Deal recruited Kelley to play on three songs at this initial recording session.[4][6] Kelley's involvement changed Deal's mind about playing all the instruments herself, and she began to conceptualize the album as a band project.[6]

After the Easley recording session, Deal returned to Dayton.[4] She asked Breeders' drummer Jim Macpherson to play drums in the new project, and Dayton musicians Luis Lerma and Nate Farley to play bass and guitar, respectively.[4][7] Deal adopted a stage persona for herself named Tammy Ampersand, and called the band "Tammy and the Amps"; this later evolved into simply "the Amps".[6] The group began by performing at small shows,[6] and learned the songs well to prepare for recording the album.[4] At some point during the recording sessions, Kelley's drug difficulties and rehabilitation prevented her from continuing as a member of the band.[6][8]

Recording

John Agnello was one of several engineers who helped to record Pacer.
Pacer was recorded at seven studios in total,[4] with different engineers each time.[9] The track "Tipp City" was used from the original session at Easley Studios,[4][10] recorded in February 1995 and engineered by Doug Easley and Davis McCain.[10] The Amps' next session was with engineer Steve Albini at his Chicago studio.[4][a 1] Deal had previously worked with Albini on the Pixies' Surfer Rosa and the Breeders' Pod releases.[11][12] The Amps and Albini recorded songs including further versions of "Tipp City", which are unreleased, and "Hoverin";[4] an earlier version of the latter song had previously been released on the Breeders' "Divine Hammer" single in October 1993.[13] Other recording sessions, whose various engineers included Bryce Goggin and John Agnello, took place at studios in Long Island and Woodstock, New York, as well as Dayton, Los Angeles, and Dublin, Ireland.[9]

In a 1996 interview, Deal said that for Pacer, she focused on the vocals: "Usually, I tend to spend more time with the instruments. Last Splash had quite a few instrumentals and quite a few songs where I might say five words. [On Pacer, the] songs are all vocal-heavy. The vocal leads, and if you take the vocal away, you don't have much of a song."[6] The sound of the album has been described as "lo-fi".[14]

Release

Pacer was released in late October 1995.[1][15] In the USA, it reached No. 29 on the Heatseekers Albums chart.[16] "Tipp City" was released as the album's single and included an alternate version of "Empty Glasses", as well as a cover of the Tasties' "Just Like a Briar".[10] The single received some radio airplay,[17] but Pacer did not sell well.[6]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]
Robert Christgau B+[18]
Spin Review 1 [19]
Spin Review 2 [20]

Critical appraisal of Pacer has been mixed. Allmusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine describes the album as "exciting, gut-level rock & roll".[1] The Rough Guide to Rock calls Pacer "satisfyingly lo-fi".[14] Robert Christgau considers the album's songs to be "definitely slight" and "uneven" but praises the vocals, writing that "speedy or dreamy, Kim Deal sounds so sane, so unpretentious, so goddamn nice that you want to take her home and give her a shampoo".[18] In The Trouser Press Guide to '90s Rock, critic Ira Robbins writes that "Other than the fine title track and a few others, the performances are forced and lackluster; the production varies between flat and colorless."[21] The New Rolling Stone Album Guide similarly praises the title song while dismissing the rest of the album as "forgettable".[22]

Track listing

All songs are credited to Kim Deal, except "I Am Decided", credited to R. Pollard/K. Deal.[9][a 2]

  1. "Pacer"
  2. "Tipp City"
  3. "I Am Decided"
  4. "Mom's Drunk"
  5. "Bragging Party"
  6. "Hoverin'"
  7. "First Revival"
  8. "Full on Idle"
  9. "Breaking the Split Screen Barrier"
  10. "Empty Glasses"
  11. "She's a Girl"
  12. "Dedicated"

Aftermath

Kim Deal playing guitar with the Amps in 1995
The Amps toured in 1995 and 1996, with bands including Guided by Voices, Sonic Youth, Brainiac, the Tasties,[4] Helium,[23] and Foo Fighters.[6] Later in 1996, the group added member Carrie Bradley (who had played on Pod), and Deal changed its name back to the Breeders.[3][23] The band's lineup continued to evolve, and within two years, Deal was the only of the former Amps left in the group.[23] Pacer is the sole album that the Amps released.[23]

A number of artists have covered songs from Pacer. The Muffs included a version of "Pacer" on their compilation albums Hamburger[24] and Kaboodle.[25] On Gigantic: A Tribute to Kim Deal, released on American Laundromat Records, the German Art Students covered "Bragging Party" and Tara King Theory, "Tipp City".[26] Musician Girl Talk included a sample of "Tipp City" on "Touch 2 Feel" on his album Unstoppable.[27] The Breeders themselves released a new version of "Full on Idle" on Title TK[28] and continue to perform Amps' songs at their concerts.[a 3]

Notes

  1. The Pacer liner notes list the engineer for this session as "Fluss". Allmusic writer Mark Derning notes that this was the name of Albini's cat, and that Albini sometimes used this name for his engineering and production work (see Derning).
  2. Former Guided by Voices bassist James Greer notes that the Amps' "I Am Decided" was an amalgamation of two Guided by Voices songs: the outtake "I Am Decided" and an early version of "Are You Faster", both of which Deal was given permission to use (Greer 2011). The Guided by Voices versions later appeared on the compilation Suitcase 2: American Superdream Wow, and are credited to band songwriter Robert Pollard (see Bealmear).
  3. Reviews of Breeders' concerts in 2002 (see Reynolds 2002), 2008 (Schroeder 2008), 2009 (Stryker 2009, Dosanjh 2009), and 2010 (Horn 2010) have noted the inclusion of Amps' songs in the band's set lists.

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Erlewine: Pacer Review
  2. Phares: Last Splash Review
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Erlewine: The Breeders Biography
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11 Moore 1996
  5. 5.0 5.1 Petrusich 2013
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 Gettelman 1996
  7. Ashare 1995
  8. Aaron 1995, pp. 86–88
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Pacer liner notes
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 "Tipp City" single liner notes
  11. Surfer Rosa Credits
  12. Pod Credits
  13. The Breeders: Divine Hammer
  14. 14.0 14.1 Buckley 2003, pp. 136–137
  15. The Amps: Pacer (4AD)
  16. Pacer Awards
  17. Borzillo 1995
  18. 18.0 18.1 Christgau
  19. Press 1996, pp. 82–83
  20. Kandell 2008, p. 74
  21. Robbins 1997, pp. 115–116
  22. Brackett 2004, p. 104
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 Phares: The Amps Biography
  24. Mason
  25. Kaboodle Overview
  26. Gigantic: A Tribute to Kim Deal Overview
  27. Stewart 2004
  28. Bryant 2002

References

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