Disgraceful

Disgraceful was Dubstar's debut album. It was released in October 1995 on the Food Records label, a division of EMI that was also home to Blur.

Disgraceful
Studio album by
Released9 October 1995
GenreSynthpop
Length43:12
LabelFood
ProducerStephen Hague, Graeme Robinson
Dubstar chronology
Disgraceful
(1995)
Goodbye
(1997)
Singles from Disgraceful
  1. "Stars"
    Released: 26 June 1995
  2. "Anywhere"
    Released: 18 September 1995
  3. "Not So Manic Now"
    Released: 25 December 1995
  4. "Stars"
    Released: 18 March 1996 (re-release)
  5. "Elevator Song"
    Released: 22 July 1996
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]

The album features two covers; "Not So Manic Now" which was originally recorded by Brick Supply on their 1994 EP Somebody's Intermezzo, and "St. Swithin's Day" which was originally recorded by Billy Bragg on his 1984 album Brewing Up with Billy Bragg.

Artwork censorship

Disgraceful's cover underwent a revision after some time on general release. The original cover—pictured here—contained a furry blue pencil case with a balloon inside, creating a somewhat labia-like effect. This was later revised to the current, slightly less blatant bunny slipper design.

Track listing

All tracks written by Steve Hillier except where noted.

  1. "Stars" – 4:09
  2. "Anywhere" (Hillier, Chris Wilkie) – 3:39
  3. "Just a Girl She Said" (Sarah Blackwood, Hillier, Wilkie) – 4:39
  4. "Elevator Song" – 2:54
  5. "The Day I See You Again" – 4:20
  6. "Week in Week Out" (Blackwood, Hillier, Wilkie) – 4:28
  7. "Not So Manic Now" (Mason) – 4:29
  8. "Popdorian" – 2:53
  9. "Not Once, Not Ever" – 3:50
  10. "St. Swithin's Day" (Bragg) – 4:01
  11. "Disgraceful" – 3:50

Personnel

Dubstar
  • Sarah Blackwood – vocals
  • Steve Hillier – programming
  • Chris Wilkie – guitar
Additional personnel
gollark: My personal view is that consciousness is the wrong question and you should be asking about relevant and actually defined properties.
gollark: Implicitly.
gollark: Wait, you basically just defined "sufficiently advanced" as "self-aware" here.
gollark: But consciousness doesn't necessarily depend on that anyway.
gollark: But if there was a version which could, it would probably need to model its own computing hardware, so actually maybe yes.

References

  1. Hayes, Kelvin. Review: Disgraceful Allmusic. Retrieved 2019-05-22


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