Mind If We Make Love to You

Mind If We Make Love to You
Studio album by Wondermints
Released September 10, 2002 (2002-09-10)
Recorded 2002
Studio Studio Thru Inner Space, Los Angeles, California, United States
Genre Power pop
Length 43:49
Language English
Label Smile
Producer The Wondermints
Wondermints chronology
Bali
(1998)
Mind If We Make Love to You
(2002)
Kaleidoscopin': Exploring Prisms of the Past
(2009)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Pop MattersPositive[2]
Uncut[3]

Mind If We Make Love to You is an album by the American power pop group Wondermints. It was released in 2002 on record label Smile Records. The unusual album title, with its intentional lack of punctuation, is a take-off of Mind If I Make Love To You, an album of 1950s cocktail instrumentals in Darian Sahanaja's record collection.[4]

On September 20, 2002, Wondermints performed a concert to promote the album at the Knitting Factory in Los Angeles,[5] featuring special guests Brian Wilson and Evie Sands.

Multiple configurations of the album have been released in different parts of the world. Some pressings contain outtakes from the album sessions as well as Wondermints' cover of The Beatles' "Getting Better", which was originally submitted for use in a Philips commercial; the submission was rejected in favor of Gomez's version.[6]

Track listing

  1. "On the Run" – 3:10
  2. "Ride" – 4:18
  3. "Shine on Me" – 4:00
  4. "Time Has You" – 3:05
  5. "Another Way" – 3:37
  6. "Project 11" – 3:41
  7. "Out of Mind" – 3:47
  8. "Sweetness" – 4:20
  9. "If I Were You" – 3:44
  10. "Something I Knew" – 2:55
  11. "Listen" – 3:27
  12. "So Nice" – 3:47
Rev-Ola 2002 reissue bonus tracks
  1. "Out of Mind" (Alternate version) – 3:47
  2. "Ride" (Instrumental) – 4:18

Personnel

The Wondermints

with

Additional musicians
Production

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Pop Matters review
  3. Uncut review
  4. I Like Striving for Something Timeless FUFKIN.com article by Robert Pally. Retrieved on 2008-07-21.
  5. Pop Tomes LA Weekly article by Dan Epstein. Retrieved on 2008-07-21
  6. Smart, Very Smart? RollingStone.com. Retrieved on 2008-07-21
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