Animal Boy
Animal Boy is the ninth studio album by American punk band the Ramones, released through Sire Records on May 19, 1986. Due to conflicts within the group, the album features less of lead singer Joey Ramone, both in performing and writing, and less performing from guitarist Johnny Ramone. Bassist Dee Dee Ramone wrote and sang more on this album than on previous albums, and Richie Ramone became the first drummer to write songs for the band since Tommy Ramone, the band's original drummer. The album spawned four singles, all of which charted on the UK Singles Chart, as well as other charts. In addition to singles, the band promoted their album using a music video for "Something to Believe In," which parodied the contemporary benefit concert Live Aid and Hands Across America.
Animal Boy | ||||
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Studio album by the Ramones | ||||
Released | May 19, 1986 | |||
Recorded | December 1985 | |||
Studio | Intergalactic Studios, New York City | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 31:44 | |||
Label | Sire | |||
Producer | Jean Beauvoir | |||
Ramones chronology | ||||
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Singles from Animal Boy | ||||
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Lyrical themes of the album range from band members' frustrations with one another, themselves, and loved ones, to more politically themed songs—a rarity in Ramones music. "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes To Bitburg)" saw the Ramones criticizing U.S. President Ronald Reagan for his controversial visit to a military cemetery in Bitburg, Germany, despite Johnny Ramone disagreeing with the song's message. Critically, Animal Boy was not nearly as acclaimed as its predecessor, Too Tough to Die, receiving generally mixed reviews. Critics were quick to point out that the band had strayed far from their original style and were experimenting with several genres by this point. However, the album charted in four different countries, including the United States and United Kingdom.
Background
By 1985, there was a considerable amount of conflict between band members. Lead singer Joey Ramone went so far as to withdraw from the writing process, after having been a vital part of it on previous records.[1] Joey recalled: "I'd had it with the Ramones. 'Mental Hell' is about that. Part of it came from breaking up with [then girlfriend] Angela. The other part of it was that I had really had it with the band."[2] In later interviews, however, Joey stated that it was not the conflict that made him stop writing, but rather that he'd had "ideas on the backburner."[3] Bassist Dee Dee Ramone claimed guitarist Johnny Ramone was the reason for much of the stress, alleging that Johnny did not want to do songs Joey wrote for multiple reasons: "Joey will present a great tune and Johnny won't do it because it's this or it's that. 'I'm not going to play minor chords. I'm not going to play lead. I'm not going to come to England.' For God's sake! That's why Joey gotta do his solo album."[3]
Consequently, the somewhat recently added drummer Richie Ramone stepped up to the writing process, resulting in the hit song "Somebody Put Something in My Drink," released as a single and later appearing on the band's first compilation album, Ramones Mania (1988). "Joey was always encouraging me to write songs," explained Richie, "but I didn't really need the encouragement."[2] This would be the first time the band featured the drummer as a songwriter since original drummer Tommy Ramone, with Joey reasoning that he wanted to make Richie feel like a part of the band; he felt past drummers had not been so much a part of the band, nor any good at writing, and called Richie a "regular Phil Collins."[4] Johnny would later say the album needed better production quality, commenting that the guitar moments did not sound like he had performed them. "The producer on [Animal Boy], Jean Beauvoir," Johnny related, "was selected by the label, not us."[5]
Marketing and promotion
For the album's front cover, the band wanted to take a photo with a monkey from the Bronx Zoo. George DuBose originally took the picture in the zoo's monkey house, but this photo was rejected by the zoo director. The zoo would not allow the band to borrow a chimp for photographing, so DuBose decided to try hiring Zippy the Chimp, a baby chimpanzee who had appeared on Late Night With David Letterman and was successful. The resulting idea was to take the picture of the band standing in front of a gorilla cage with Punk Magazine founder Legs McNeil in a gorilla costume. Richie is holding Zippy, and DuBose had to refrain from flashing light so as not to frighten it. However, according to DuBose, the chimp was already out of control. "Zippy was getting wild," Dubose recalled. "He wasn't looking at the camera and was fucking around with the guys. I wasn't getting the picture because the chimp was out of control, so finally the trainer goes up to Zippy and whacks him across the face."[6] The lack of flash resulted in a lowlighted, warmer colored photograph, which would be used as the album's cover.[6]
Animal Boy was released on May 19, 1986. While touring for its promotion, the band only used four to five songs from the album while the rest of the set list was derived from songs off earlier releases. Johnny described this type of concert setlist to promote releases to be common for "a lot of later [Ramones] albums," saying it was "because the material didn't measure up to our other stuff."[5]
In addition to touring, Sire Records and Beggars Banquet Records in the UK released four singles to help promote the album in hopes of receiving more radio airplay. The first single from Animal Boy was "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg)," issued by Beggars Banquet in June 1985. "Go Home Anne" was the B-side, produced by Ed Stasium and mixed by Lemmy Kilmister, lead singer of Motörhead.[8][9] There were multiple explanations given for why the single was not released in the United States: the product manager at Sire Records explained that it was both a "financial and political" decision, while the parent company, Warner Bros. Records, claimed that "It just wasn't considered a good enough record."[10] The single's jacket cover depicted President Reagan giving a speech at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp before going to Bitburg, but the image was removed from later pressings.[11][12] British newspaper Melody Maker claimed it was removed because the band received pressure from "Moral Majority, the Patriotic League of the Alamo, and the SS."[10]
The music video for "Something to Believe In" was a parody of both the Live Aid benefit concert and Hands Across America.[13][14] The video was described by author Everett True to be "reassuringly foolish" and "a welcome return to [the Ramones'] old sense of humor."[15] Several guests are featured in the video, including The B52s, Weird Al Yankovic, Spinal Tap, Ted Nugent, The Circle Jerks, Toni Basil, Rodney Bingenheimer, Holly Beth Vincent, and Afrika Bambaataa. Because the music video was praised by Warner Bros., they released "Something to Believe In" as a double A-side with "Somebody Put Something in My Drink."[15] "Something to Believe In" was also released with "Animal Boy" in the United States and "Crummy Stuff" in the UK through Beggars Banquet.[16][17]
Lyrics and composition
Animal Boy featured a range of genres and musical elements that were completely new to the band and had not been featured on previous albums. Frequent use of synthesizers, as well as minimalistic "gimmicky" lyrics,[3] caused critics and fans to feel as though the Ramones had strayed far away from their early, raw punk sound, despite Animal Boy's predecessor Too Tough Too Die being acclaimed for the band returning to their roots.[3] "The main problem with Animal Boy," explained author Everett True, "was that there was no longer one discernible Ramones sound: it sounds as disjointed as the band members probably felt. The guitar parts could've been played by anyone, and Richie's drumming was slipping away from Tommy's original template. The Ramones were turning into a 9-5 job, night not day."[3]
The album begins with Joey singing "Somebody Put Something in My Drink," written by Richie, who stated that he came up with the lyrics while he was dating Frankie Valli's daughter and mistakenly drank after someone else in a nightclub.[2] Rolling Stone editor David Fricke described Joey's vocal performance in the song as an "exaggerated wino growl while Johnny crushes the chord changes with his trash-compactor guitar."[18] "Animal Boy" and "Apeman Hop" were compositionally similar to "Cretin Hop" from 1977's Rocket To Russia, but were described by True to be "a thousandth as good."[19] "Love Kills" was inspired by the Alex Cox biopic Sid and Nancy (also known as Sid and Nancy: Love Kills). The lyrics relate that the couple will never be able to win with drugs, despite the fact that the song's writer himself, Dee Dee, would later succumb to a heroin overdose.[19] Animal Boy's fifth track, "She Belongs to Me," is a ballad written by Dee Dee and Beauvoir regarding unrequited love, and features heavy use of synthesizers, while earlier albums would have used a soft acoustic guitar or occasionally strings for ballad-type songs.[3] Side A of the album concludes with "Crummy Stuff," played in a pop punk style, with repetitive lyrics based on the band's past of being chaotic and never meeting expectations.[19]
Side B begins with one of the band's only politically based songs, "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg)." The lyrics encapsulated the feelings of Joey, Dee Dee and Beauviour while watching US President Ronald Reagan visit a military cemetery in Bitburg, West Germany to pay tribute to the victims of Nazism. In an interview with East Coast Rocker, Joey explained: "What Reagan did was fucked up. Everybody told him not to go, all his people told him not to go, and he went anyway. How can you fuckin' forgive the Holocaust? How can you say, 'Oh well, it's OK now?' That's crazy!"[20] Dee Dee also asserted that Johnny had made the band seem right winged. "It was the first time we could make a statement to show we weren't prejudiced," he explained. "We'd just had these skinheads at our gigs, punks walking around wearing swastikas."[20] Johnny disliked the song and resisted playing the song live, saying that Reagan was his favorite president of his lifetime.[20] It was Johnny who insisted that the song's title be changed to "My Brain is Hanging Upside Down";[21] "Bonzo Gows to Bitburg", the original title, was relegated to parenthesis. "Bonzo", a pejorative nickname for Reagan, refers to a chimpanzee from a 1951 Comedy Film which Reagan starred in.
"Mental Hell," the next track and the second written by Joey, dealt with his recent stress with the band and his relationship with his girlfriend, Angela, ending. Author Dave Thompson described "Eat That Rat" as "reaching back to their pure punk past."[22] While "Eat That Rat" is one minute and thirty-seven seconds long, the shortest track on the album is the next song, "Freak of Nature," which clocks in at one minute and thirty-two seconds. Johnny explained that it was written by him and Dee Dee while changing reels in an open-reel audio tape recording at the studio.[5] "Hair of the Dog," a piece about the guilt of alcoholism,[23] is the third and final song written by Joey. The album's last track, "Something to Believe In," was influenced heavily by British pop,[22] and was described by Susan Cummings of Spin as a "pseudo-AOR attempted teen anthem" and by author Scott Schnider as a "surging, yearning anthem."[23][24]
Reception
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Robert Christgau | B+[26] |
Rolling Stone | (favorable)[18] |
The album received mixed reviews from critics. Music critic Robert Christgau gave the album a "B+" and considered both "She Belongs to Me" and "Crummy Stuff" to be "defensive-sounding," but called "Something to Believe In" an anthem and praised "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg)."[26] Rolling Stone critic David Fricke deemed the album a "reductionist masterpiece" that "proves they still have a lot more to give," claiming that it rivaled previous albums Leave Home and Rocket to Russia.[18]
The Ramones' decade of discontent on rock's commercial and social fringe has hardened their little rascal hearts; "Mental Hell" is a "My Degeneration" crawling-the-walls blues, and Dee Dee spits out the words of the ninety-seven-second harangue "Eat That Rat" with venomous zeal. "Love Kills," originally intended for the soundtrack of Alex Cox's forthcoming Sid Vicious-Nancy Spungen docudrama, sounds like standard-issue bamalama until you decipher the agitated mix of bitter loss and righteous anger in Dee Dee's rabid yapping.
— David Fricke, Rolling Stone[18]
Eduardo Rivadavia, editor for AllMusic, later criticized the album for using more modern commercial conventions and for its heavy use of synthesizers and keyboards in an attempt to reinvent the band's style. Rivadavia specifically pointed to "Somebody Put Something in My Drink," which he claimed "wastes an aggressive vocal performance from Joey Ramone by supporting it with a shamelessly polished synthesizer backing track," and referred to "Something to Believe In" as "unbearably soft."[25] He concluded that the album had been a "career low" for the Ramones, but still rated it three out of five stars.[25]
In the United States, the album entered the Billboard 200 on June 21, 1986 at #146, and rose to #143 the following week. Despite staying on the chart for six weeks, the album's peak position did not rise above #143.[27][28] It entered the UK Album Charts on May 31, 1986, where it stayed for two weeks and reached a peak position of #38.[29] The album entered the Canadian charts on June 7, 1986 at #96,[30] moving up to #94 a week later.[31] The album returned to position #96 on June 21, leaving the chart on July 12.[32][33] On June 11, it entered the Swedish Sverigetopplistan charts, where it remained on the chart for one week at #37.[34]
Track listing
Track listing adapted from the Animal Boy liner notes.[35]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Somebody Put Something in My Drink" | Richie Ramone | 3:23 |
2. | "Animal Boy" | Dee Dee Ramone, Johnny Ramone | 1:50 |
3. | "Love Kills" | Dee Dee Ramone | 2:19 |
4. | "Apeman Hop" | Dee Dee Ramone | 2:02 |
5. | "She Belongs to Me" | Dee Dee Ramone, Jean Beauvoir | 3:54 |
6. | "Crummy Stuff" | Dee Dee Ramone | 2:06 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
7. | "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg)" | Joey Ramone, Dee Dee Ramone, Jean Beauvoir | 3:55 |
8. | "Mental Hell" | Joey Ramone | 2:38 |
9. | "Eat That Rat" | Dee Dee Ramone, Johnny Ramone | 1:37 |
10. | "Freak of Nature" | Dee Dee Ramone, Johnny Ramone | 1:32 |
11. | "Hair of the Dog" | Joey Ramone | 2:19 |
12. | "Something to Believe In" | Dee Dee Ramone, Jean Beauvoir | 4:09 |
Personnel
All information credited to Allmusic except where noted.[25]
Ramones
- Joey Ramone – lead vocals (tracks 1-2, 4-8, 10-12)
- Johnny Ramone – guitar, bass guitar (track 3)
- Dee Dee Ramone – bass guitar, backing vocals, lead vocals (tracks 3, 9)
- Richie Ramone – drums, backing vocals
Production and additional musicians
- Jean Beauvoir – producer, co-mixer, additional guitars, keyboards and background vocals
- Walter Lure - additional guitar[3]
- Jorge Esteban – engineer
- George DuBose - art design, photography
References
- Citations
- Leigh 2009, pp. 258, 261.
- Leigh 2009, p. 261.
- True 2005, ch. 23 p. 3.
- True 2005, ch. 23 pp. 10–11.
- Ramone 2012, ch. "Animal Boy" p. 1.
- Melnick & Melnick 2010, p. 212.
- True 2005, ch. 23. pp. 5–6.
- Leigh 2009, pp. 237, 249.
- Leland, John (October 1985). "Singles". Spin. p. 39.
- Jaffee, Larry (November–December 1985). "Disc Spells Hit Time for Bonzo". Mother Jones. p. 10.
- Jaffee, Larry (November–December 1985). "Disc Spells Hit Time for Bonzo". Mother Jones. p. 10.
- Weinraub, Bernard (May 6, 1985). "Reagan Joins Kohl in Brief Memorial at Bitburg Graves". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-01-22.
- "Hands Across Your Face". Rhino. Archived from the original on 20 January 2009. Retrieved 14 August 2009.
- Doherty, Brian; Gillespie, Nick (August–September 2001). "I Dreamed I Saw Joey Ramone Last Night: The P.C. eulogizing of a punk rocker". Reason. Reason Foundation. Archived from the original on 6 August 2009. Retrieved 14 August 2009.
- True 2005, ch. 23. p. 6.
- Ramone 2003, p. 244.
- Popoff 2010, p. 971.
- "The Ramones: Animal Boy". Rolling Stone. 1986-07-17.
- True 2005, ch. 23 p. 4.
- True 2005, ch. 21, p. 30.
- https://www.washingtontimes.com/blog/watercooler/2011/feb/1/reagan-100-quotes-and-about-ronald-reagan-johnny-r/
- Thompson 2000, p. 582.
- Cummings, Sue (August 1986). "The Ramones: Animal Boy". Spin. p. 32.
- Schnider 2008, p. 556.
- Rivadavia, Eduardo. "Animal Boy – Ramones". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 August 2009.
- Christgau, Robert. "CG: Ramones". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 14 August 2009.
- "Top 200 Albums". Billboard. 1986-06-21. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- "Top 200 Albums". Billboard. 1986-06-28. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- "The Official Charts Company - The Ramones". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
- "RPM100 Albums." 1986-06-07. Collectionscanada.gc.ca, Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- "RPM100 Albums." Archived 2012-11-08 at the Wayback Machine 1986-06-14. Collectionscanada.gc.ca, Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- "RPM100 Albums." 1986-06-21. Collectionscanada.gc.ca, Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- "RPM100 Albums." 1986-07-05. Collectionscanada.gc.ca, Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- "Ramones – Animal Boy." Swedishcharts.com. Sverigetopplistan. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- Animal Boy (LP). Ramones. Rhino Records. 1986. 925433-1.CS1 maint: others (link)
- Bibliography
- Leigh, Mickey (2009). I Slept With Joey Ramone: A Family Memoir. Touchstone Books. ISBN 9780743252164.
- Melnick, Monte; Meyer, Frank (2010). On the Road With the Ramones. Bobcat Books. ISBN 9780857122230.
- Popoff, Martin (2010). Goldmine Standard Catalog of American Records 1948–1991. F+W Media. ISBN 9781440216213.
- Ramone, Dee Dee (2003). Legend of a Rock Star: A Memoir. Da Capo Press. ISBN 9781560253891.
- Ramone, Johnny (2012). Commando: The Autobiography of Johnny Ramone. Abrams Books. ISBN 9780810996601.
- Schinder, Scott; Schwartz, Andy (2008). Icons of Rock. Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313338458.
- Thompson, Dave (2000). Alternative Rock: Great Musicians, Influential Groups: 7000 Recordings Reviewed & Rated. Miller Freeman, Inc. ISBN 9780879306076.
- True, Everett (2005). Hey Ho Let's Go: The Story of the Ramones. Omnibus Press. ISBN 9781844494132.
External links
- Animal Boy at Discogs (list of releases)
- Lyrics from this album at MetroLyrics