The Dresden Dolls (album)

The Dresden Dolls is the debut studio album by American Brechtian Punk Cabaret duo The Dresden Dolls. It was recorded by Brooklyn producer Martin Bisi and released on September 26, 2003 on 8ft. Records, the band's personal label. Upon signing with Roadrunner Records, the album was re-released on April 27, 2004. The enhanced CD included a video for "Girl Anachronism". The album artwork was also modified to mask which record sleeves had been used in the album artwork.[3]

The Dresden Dolls
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 26, 2003 (8 Ft. Records release)
April 27, 2004 (Roadrunner U.S. release)
July 13, 2005 (Roadrunner Japanese release)
RecordedSummer/Fall 2002
GenreDark cabaret
Length56:53
Label8ft., Roadrunner
ProducerMartin Bisi
The Dresden Dolls chronology
A Is for Accident
(2003)
The Dresden Dolls
(2003)
Yes, Virginia...
(2006)
Singles from The Dresden Dolls
  1. "Girl Anachronism"
    Released: October, 2003
  2. "Good Day"
    Released: December, 2003
  3. "Coin-Operated Boy"
    Released: December 13, 2004
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Pitchfork Media8.2/10[2]

This is Amanda Palmer's highest-selling album, a self-titled 2004 release with her punk-cabaret band Dresden Dolls, has sold 149,000 copies; none of her subsequent albums (two more Dresden Dolls records, a solo release and an album by a project called Evelyn Evelyn) crossed the 100,000 mark, according to Nielsen SoundScan. [4]

The Dresden Dolls Companion

In The Dresden Dolls Companion, Amanda Palmer has published a history of this album and of the duo, as well as a partial autobiography. The book also contains the lyrics, sheet music, and notes on each song in the album, as well as a DVD with a 20-minute interview with Amanda. In the interview, Amanda discusses the making of the album and the artwork while working on the artwork in her apartment.[3]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Amanda Palmer.

No.TitleLength
1."Good Day"5:51
2."Girl Anachronism"2:59
3."Missed Me"4:53
4."Half Jack"5:57
5."672"1:24
6."Coin-Operated Boy"4:46
7."Gravity"4:19
8."Bad Habit"3:01
9."The Perfect Fit"5:45
10."The Jeep Song"4:50
11."Slide"4:30
12."Truce" (The song "Truce" ends at minute 8:00. After 27 seconds of silence, begins an untitled hidden track: there is a woman that says "Amanda, you're telling me a fairy tale".)8:34

Personnel

The Dresden Dolls
Additional personnel
gollark: I do wish the internetworking companies would just use some sort of scheme of limited bandwidth with some allowance for short peaks instead of data caps, which would match closer to what the actual constraints are.
gollark: Though over here they're mostly just used on mobile phone connections, not home ones.
gollark: Data caps do kind of work well at getting people to use less *bandwidth* because people don't use their internet connection as much, but they don't actually have some finite amount of internets or something weird like that.
gollark: Though you do need sensible small parties in the first place.
gollark: Probably less so, if you can vote for a popular party you like less and a less popular one you like more. It reduces the "I don't like either big party but I'm voting for the least bad one" thing.

References

  1. Alex Henderson. "The Dresden Dolls - The Dresden Dolls". Allmusic. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  2. Chris Dahlen (14 February 2011). "The Dresden Dolls: Dresden Dolls". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  3. The Dresden Dolls Companion, by Amanda Palmer, eight foot music publishing, June 2006, ISBN 1-57560-888-X ISBN 978-1575608884
  4. Harding Smart, Cortney (14 August 2010). "Cult of Personality". Billboard. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
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