C'mon Kids

C'mon Kids
Studio album by The Boo Radleys
Released 9 September 1996
Recorded January–February 1996
Studio Rockfield Studios, Wales
Genre Britpop, indie rock, noise pop
Length 52:39
Label Creation CRECD 194
Producer Paul Q. Kolderie, Sean Slade, The Boo Radleys
The Boo Radleys chronology
Wake Up!
(1995)Wake Up!1995
C'mon Kids
(1996)
Kingsize
(1998)Kingsize1998

C'mon Kids is the fifth album by The Boo Radleys, it was released in September 1996. The album is considered to be purposely difficult and uncommercial. The band were said to have wanted to distance themselves from the commercial image they had cultivated because of the unexpected successes of the album Wake Up! and their top ten hit single "Wake Up Boo!". However, this was not the intention of the band as explained by Sice in an interview in 2005:

We didn't want to scare away the hit-kids, we wanted to take them with us to somewhere that we'd not been before. All we wanted to do was make a different type of album than Wake Up... All we wanted to do was try something new – to keep ourselves fresh and interested. We were very surprised to find that it was seen as a deliberate attempt to scare away newly created fans. That would have been an extremely foolish thing to do.
Sice

C'mon Kids is the all-time favourite album of Tom White of The Electric Soft Parade, a band influenced by the album.[1] According to Martin Sainsbury of Drowned in Sound, Nicky Wire of Manic Street Preachers also listened to "little else for a year," whereas Radiohead "went back to the drawing board when hearing it during the OK Computer sessions."[1][2]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [3]
Drowned in Sound(10/10)[1]
Twisted Ear [4]

The album was less successful than its predecessor, charting at #20 on the UK albums chart.[5] It did however spawn three UK top 40 singles, "What's In The Box? (See Whatcha Got)" at #25, "C'mon Kids" at #18 (their second and last UK top 20 single), and a radio edit of "Ride The Tiger" (shortened by over three minutes from the album version) made #38.[6]

In his book Turn on Your Mind: Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock, writer Jim DeRogatis ranked C'Mon Kids at number 110 in his list "The Ultimate Psychedelic Rock Library: One-Hundred Eighty-Nine Albums You Can't Live Without."[7] Music journalist Mark Beaumont said the album "deserved the edict of 'post Britpop classic'."[8]

Track listing

All tracks written by Martin Carr.

No.TitleLength
1."C'mon Kids"4:10
2."Meltin's Worm"4:19
3."Melodies for the Deaf (Colours for the Blind)"3:45
4."Get on the Bus"3:13
5."Everything Is Sorrow"4:38
6."Bullfrog Green"4:41
7."What's in the Box? (See Whatcha Got)"3:30
8."Four Saints"4:26
9."New Brighton Promenade"3:06
10."Fortunate Sons"3:58
11."Shelter"2:01
12."Ride the Tiger"6:38
13."One Last Hurrah"4:20
2010 reissue CD2
No.TitleLength
1."Bloke in a Dress"2:41
2."Flakes"1:53
3."What's in the Box? (See Whatcha Got) (Kris's Erupting Cricket Box Mix)"7:37
4."Atlantic"3:09
5."The Absent Boy"2:01
6."Annie & Marnie"3:26
7."Spion Kop"2:02
8."To Beautiful"1:42
9."Bullfrog Green (Ultra Living Remix)"4:57
10."Nothing to Do But Scare Myself"3:06
11."From the Bench at Belvidere (Ultramarine Remix)"6:38
12."Fortunate Sons (Greg Hunter Remix)"4:02
13."Vote You"2:35
14."A Part I Know So Well"2:24
15."Everything is Sorrow (Grantby Remix)"6:50
16."Roadie"3:05
17."Safe at Home"2:17
18."C'mon Kids (Mekon Remix)"2:35

Personnel

References

  1. 1 2 3 Sainsbury, Martin (3 October 2001). "Album Review: Boo Radleys - C'mon Kids". Drowned in Sound. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  2. "Drawing for kids".
  3. Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "The Boo Radleys: C'mon Kids > Review" at AllMusic. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  4. Quinn, Graham. "The Boo Radleys – C'Mon Kids". twistedear.com. Archived from the original on 6 June 2007.
  5. "Cmon Kids". chartstats.com. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  6. "The Boo Radleys". chartstats.com. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  7. DeRogatis, Jim (1 December 2003). Turn on Your Mind: Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock. Wisconsin: Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 570. ISBN 0634055488. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  8. Beaumont, Mark (8 October 2008). Out of This World - The Story of Muse. United Kingdom: Omnibus Press. ISBN 1847723772. Retrieved 3 May 2017.


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