Detailed item info | Track listing | 1. Jane 2. Intermittently 3. These Apples 4. You Will Be Waiting 5. A 6. Everything Old Is New Again 7. Alternative Girlfriend 8. Am I the Only One? 9. Little Tiny Song 10. Life, In a Nutshell 11. Wrong Man Was Convicted, The 12. Great Provider
| | Details | | Producer: | Ben Mink | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording type: | Studio | | Recording mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
| | Album notes | Barenaked Ladies: Steven Page (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars); Ed Robertson (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars, pedal steel, mandolin, mandola, banjo, bass drum); Andrew Creeggan (accordion, piano, hammered dulcimer, reed organ, keyboards, percussion, background vocals); Jim Creeggan (cello, bass, background vocals); Tyler Stewart (drums). Additional personnel: Ben Mink (acoustic & electric guitar, violin, viola); Carolyn Ricketts (flute); Tom Keenlyside (clarinet); Kirsten Nash (saxophone); Paul Baron (trumpet); Colin Weinmaster (trombone); Neil Nicholson (tuba). Recorded at Greenhouse Studios, Vancouver, Canada; Armoury Studios, Vancouver, Canada. Can't get enough of thoughtful lyrics, sweetly strummed acoustics, and charming, new-age guys? Barenaked Ladies' second LP, MAYBE YOU SHOULD DRIVE, embodies these pleasantries, but spices them with a handful of tongue-in-cheek jabs. The band's acoustic, jazzy music bops along as energetically as a Greenpeace canvasser in a newly gentrified neighborhood, but the lyrics read more like the interior monologue than the sales pitch. Barenaked Ladies' lyrics stab at generational stereotypes, but are surprisingly quiet and radio-ready. The song "A" shows the band's goofiness in the midst of mockery ("`A' is for `angry,' which you are at me," croons singer Steven Page, "`A' is for `adult' which I'll never be"), while "Everything Old Is New Again" shows pop culture's need to repeat itself. "Recycle, reuse, regret, and refuse our parent's ideals and views," sings Page, and you can't help but be impressed. Barenaked Ladies have made the cliches of youth culture seems terribly hip and fashionable. While not the teeming generational war-cry of early-'90s rap or alternative rock, the sociological observations of MAYBE YOU SHOULD DRIVE show the lighter side of twentysomething cynicism.
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