Ruby Vroom

Ruby Vroom
Studio album by Soul Coughing
Released September 27, 1994
Recorded April – June 1994
Genre Alternative rock, alternative hip hop, beat poetry, experimental rock
Length 61:27
Label Slash/Warner Bros. Records
45752
Producer Tchad Blake
Soul Coughing chronology
Ruby Vroom
(1994)
Irresistible Bliss
(1996)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Robert Christgau(A)[2]
Rolling Stone[3]

Ruby Vroom was Soul Coughing's 1994 debut album. The album's sound is a mixture of sample-based tunes (loops of Raymond Scott's "Powerhouse" on "Bus to Beelzebub", Toots and the Maytals, Howlin' Wolf, The Andrews Sisters, and The Roches on "Down to This", and a loop of sampler player Mark De Gli Antoni's orchestral horns on "Screenwriter's Blues", among others). It also features guitar-based tunes like "Janine", "Moon Sammy", and "Supra Genius" and jazzy, upright-bass-fueled songs that often slyly quoted other material—the theme from Courageous Cat on "Is Chicago, Is Not Chicago", Thelonious Monk's "Misterioso" on "Casiotone Nation", and Bobby McFerrin's cover of Joan Armatrading's "Opportunity" on "Uh, Zoom Zip".

The album's lone guest is Rachel Benbow Murdy, band founder Mike Doughty's ex-girlfriend, who supplies a vocal on "Janine". Doughty had Murdy go out to a payphone in Sheridan Square in New York and improvise a long, meandering song into their answering machine. Recorded a year before the Ruby sessions, Doughty and bass player Sebastian Steinberg recorded the tune at the avant-garde jazz club The Knitting Factory during the daytime, when the club was closed, with club soundperson James McLean. McLean put a mic on the answering machine, which Doughty had brought to the session.

Ruby was named after Ruby Froom, daughter of record producer Mitchell Froom—a frequent collaborator of Ruby Vroom producer Tchad Blake—and singer/songwriter Suzanne Vega.

The album was recorded at Sunset Sound Factory in Hollywood, Blake and Froom's usual haunt—a storage room near the studio's lounge was filled with vintage keyboards and road cases filled with toys—whistles, baby rattles, children's toy xylophones. Many of these ended up in the songs, such as a train whistle played by Doughty on "Uh, Zoom Zip". This was in keeping with Tchad Blake's spirit of maverick experimentation, which included sticking a binaural head-shaped microphone in front of Yuval Gabay's drumkit, sticking a mic in a car muffler, called "the Bone" and sticking that in the drum booth as well, and having Doughty improvise wild, yelling ad-libs on "Casiotone Nation", singing into a cheap amplification system called an Ahuja that Blake bought in India. The speaker was essentially a huge bullhorn atop a stick.

Track listing

  1. "Is Chicago, Is Not Chicago" – 3:48
  2. "Sugar Free Jazz" – 3:55
  3. "Casiotone Nation" – 3:50
  4. "Blue Eyed Devil" – 4:12
  5. "Bus to Beelzebub" – 4:33
  6. "True Dreams of Wichita" – 5:00
  7. "Screenwriter's Blues" – 5:08
  8. "Moon Sammy" – 4:09
  9. "Supra Genius" – 3:59
  10. "City of Motors" – 4:38
  11. "Uh, Zoom Zip" – 3:56
  12. "Down to This" – 3:49
  13. "Mr. Bitterness" – 5:32
  14. "Janine" – 4:58

Singles

"Down To This"

  1. ."Down To This"
  2. ."Is Chicago, Is Not Chicago (Live)"
  3. ."Buddha Rhubarb Butter"
  4. ."Casiotone Nation (Live)"

"Sugar Free Jazz"

  1. ."Jazz Free Sucrose Jungle Dub"
  2. ."Molasses Dub"
  3. ."Weirdo Dub"
  4. ."Sugar Cane Jungle Mix"
  5. ."Sugar Free Jazz (Album Version)"
  6. ."Screenwriter's Blue (Live)"

"Screenwriter's Blues"

  1. ."Screenwriter's Blues (Mood Swing Mix)"
  2. ."Down To This"
  3. ."Bus To Beelzebub"
  4. ."Screenwriter's Blues (CHiPs Mix)"
  5. ."Screenwriter's Blues (CHiPs Instrumental)"

Personnel

References

  1. Ruby Vroom at AllMusic
  2. Christgau, Robert. "Soul Coughing". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 2012-12-05.
  3. Azerrad, Michael (Dec 15, 1994). "Review of Ruby Vroom". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 2007-10-01. Retrieved 2012-05-28.
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