Hallucigenia (album)

Hallucigenia is an album by Canadian band The Lowest of the Low, released in 1994.[2]

Hallucigenia
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 1994
Recordedat Vancouver Studios
GenreIndie rock
Length59:01
LabelYes Boy Records/A&M
ProducerDon Smith
The Lowest of the Low chronology
Shakespeare My Butt
(1991)
Hallucigenia
(1994)
Nothing Short of a Bullet
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]

It was the band's first and only release on a major record label.[3] The album was recorded in 1993 with producer Don Smith, but its release was delayed several months as the band sorted out the details of their contract with A&M Records.[4] Smith brought an impressive pedigree to the project having produced records for Keith Richards, The Tragically Hip and 54-40[5] but the band and Smith never gelled with lead singer Ron Hawkins having serious issues with him. [6]"We had a horrible time working with him. We had some major political differences with him. I called our manager and said “What happens if I punch the producer in the face? They were like “We just paid him seventy-thousand dollars so you’re with him for another 30 days.” Despite the differences, the album had a heavier rock and roll sound. "Smith added some crunch and heft to the band's heavier rock songs. "Motel 30" and "Eating the Rich" definitely benefitted from Smith's influence, while earworms in "Pistol" and "Gamble" became staples of local radio for a reason."[7]

The album also reveals the source of the band's name, opening with a clip of former President of the United States George H. W. Bush stating "We do not want to be the lowest of the low. We are not a nation in decline."

The album peaked at #37 in the RPM album charts;[8] however, it was not as well received by audiences or critics as Shakespeare My Butt.[9] The band was also riven by significant internal tensions, and broke up barely a few months after Hallucigenia's release.[10] The band subsequently reunited in 2000, and issued the live album Nothing Short of a Bullet in 2002.[11]

"City Full of Cowards" was released as a CD single, with the non-album B-sides "Bit" and "Crying Like a Postcard". "Motel 30" was also released as a CD single, with the non-album B-side "The Unbearable Lightness of Jean". "Gamble" was the album's other main single, with the album track "Night of the Living Assholes" as its B-side.

Guests

Art Bergmann appears as a guest musician on "Beer, Graffiti Walls". He is the subject of the song "Life Imitates Art", and is referenced in the lyrics to "Pistol" alongside Joe Strummer, Black Flag and Billy Bragg. The band's manager at the time knew Bergmann and arranged the cameo: "So we met Art when he came in to do that with Hallucigenia and we just became friends."[12] The "graffiti" that Bergmann quotes in the track is actually taken from a real "beer graffiti wall." "That song was partially about this place called Sneaky Dee’s (Toronto). That’s where the Lowest Of The Low used to hang out til all hours of the night, all the time, so I pulled most of the stuff that’s in that spoken word off the graffiti in the bathroom there. We wanted to get him to just spew it out. I thought Art’s perfect for that, he’ll give it a nasty turn."[13]

Track listing

All songs by Ron Hawkins, except where noted.

  1. "Pistol" - 4:31
  2. "That Song About Trees and Kites" - Hawkins/Kathleen Olmstead - 2:26
  3. "City Full of Cowards" - 4:03
  4. "Eating the Rich" - 4:05
  5. "Gamble" - 4:49
  6. "Dogs of February" - Stephen Stanley - 4:34
  7. "Black Monday" - 5:14
  8. "Beer, Graffiti Walls" - 5:25
  9. "7th Birthday" - 4:15
  10. "Penedono's Hand" - Stanley - 3:21
  11. "Life Imitates Art" - 3:34
  12. "Last, Lost Generation" - 3:46
  13. "Motel 30" - 3:05
  14. "Night of the Living Assholes" - 5:52
gollark: Nobody also said something about stalking someone *else*, without telling them.
gollark: There's not JUST that.
gollark: Much of the context is deletinated foolishogkoklkly.
gollark: It's probably just my eyes being weird, never mind.
gollark: Is it just me or is that a different shade of green now?

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Chris Dafoe, "Hallucigenia / The Lowest of The Low". The Globe and Mail, April 25, 1994.
  3. Lynn Saxberg, "Lowest of the Low opts for major label". Ottawa Citizen, March 24, 1994.
  4. David Howell, "Pop group takes on grim topic; Song about incest out of character for upbeat Toronto band". Edmonton Journal, May 2, 1994.
  5. "Don Smith Producing Credits". Allmusic.com.
  6. "The Highs and Lows with the Lowest of the Low". spill magazine.com.
  7. "Lowest of the Low Shakespeare My Box!!". Exclaim.ca.
  8. "RPM 100 Albums". RPM, April 18, 1994.
  9. "Lowest of the Low get back up with Sordid Fiction". Timmins Daily Press, October 13, 2004.
  10. Peter Howell, "The lowdown on the Lowest Of The Low". Toronto Star, November 10, 1994.
  11. Eric Vollmers, "Lowest of the Low ready to hit the heights". Waterloo Region Record, October 16, 2002.
  12. "The Highs of the Lowest of the Low". Spill Magazine.com.
  13. "The Highs of the Lowest of the Low". Spill Magazine.com.
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