Sixteen Tambourines

Sixteen Tambourines is the first album by The Three O'Clock, released in 1983.

Sixteen Tambourines
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1983
GenreAlternative rock, Paisley Underground
LabelFrontier Records
ProducerEarle Mankey
The Three O'Clock chronology
The Salvation Army
(1982)
Sixteen Tambourines
(1983)
Arrive Without Travelling
(1985)

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
The Village VoiceC+[2]

Critical reaction to Sixteen Tambourines has been polarized, with the album being hailed as "incredible" in some quarters, but dismissed as "precious" or "twee" in others.

Trouser Press described the album as "absolutely charming and remarkably memorable," as well as being "an incredible full-length collection of chiming, memorable power pop tunes played and sung as if each track were likely to get played on every radio station coast-to-coast," singling out producer Earle Mankey's work as "slick and inventive."

In a contemporary review for The Village Voice, Robert Christgau gave Sixteen Tambourines a "C+" and said hearing such "precious falsettos" and "baroquely tuneful" music "might (I said might) have been fun" in the 1960s, "but in 1983 it's likely to make a grown man puke".[2] A blogger for The Guardian later called the album "pretty awful", complaining that The Three O'Clock "always hinted at something incredible, and then ruined it all with an anaemic keyboard line or singer Michael Quericio's weedy vocals. If you were to sum them up in one word, it would be twee."[3]

Reviewing the album's paired release with the 1982 EP Baroque Hoedown, AllMusic critic Sean Westergaard gave it four and a half out of five stars and recommended the release "a good way to check out this important band from the paisley underground".[4]

Track listing

All song written by Louis Gutierrez and Michael Quercio, except where noted.

Side A

  1. "Jet Fighter" – 3:22 (Mariano, Gutierrez and Quercio)
  2. "Stupid Einstein" – 2:17
  3. "And So We Run" – 2:40
  4. "Fall to the Ground" – 2:27
  5. "A Day in Erotica" – 4:20

Side B

  1. "Tomorrow" – 3:41
  2. "In My Own Time" – 2:03 (Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb)
  3. "On My Own" – 2:48
  4. "When Lightning Starts" – 3:31
  5. "Seeing Is Believing" – 4:27

Personnel

  • Danny Benair – drums
  • Louis Gutierrez – guitar, vocals, percussion
  • Mike Mariano – keyboards, vocals, percussion
  • Michael Quercio – vocals, bass guitar, percussion
  • Earle Mankey – producer
gollark: We get relatively few complaints, actually, because my code is perfect and without flaw.
gollark: It's the second-most popular non-default OS on Switchcraft, by some metrics!
gollark: Yesterday I had to rewrite potatOS's network handling code to remove a lag issue on big networks on servers.
gollark: WRONG, it's ***EXTREME PROGRAMMING***.
gollark: PotatOS has pretty good autoupdate, so I have to fix any bug which crops up within about 5 minutes.

References

  1. Sullivan, Denise. "Sixteen Tambourines – The Three O'Clock". AllMusic. Retrieved July 10, 2017.
  2. Christgau, Robert (December 27, 1983). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". The Village Voice. Retrieved December 10, 2016.
  3. "Catch of the day: The Three O'Clock". The Guardian. February 26, 2008. Retrieved December 10, 2016.
  4. Westergaard, Sean. "Sixteen Tambourines/Baroque Hoedown". AllMusic. Retrieved December 10, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.