90 Bisodol (Crimond)
90 Bisodol (Crimond) is the twelfth album by UK rock band Half Man Half Biscuit, released in September 2011.
The inner sleeve includes a modified version of the painting Christ's Entry into Jerusalem by William Gale (1823–1909),[3] in which one onlooker holds a sign with the words "Dirk Hofman Motorhomes". This is a reference to a man who holds such a sign at the finish of European cycling races.
Track listing
1. |
"Something's Rotten in the Back of Iceland " |
2:33 |
2. |
"RSVP" |
2:58 |
3. |
"Tommy Walsh's Eco House" |
2:38 |
4. |
"Joy in Leeuwarden (We Are Ready)" |
2:30 |
5. |
"Excavating Rita" |
3:39 |
6. |
"Fun Day in the Park" |
2:00 |
7. |
"Descent of the Stiperstones" |
5:16 |
8. |
"Left Lyrics in the Practice Room" |
2:07 |
9. |
"L'enfer c'est les autres" |
3:10 |
10. |
"Fix It So She Dreams of Me" |
2:53 |
11. |
"The Coroner's Footnote" |
3:46 |
12. |
"Rock and Roll Is Full of Bad Wools" |
5:08 |
Critical reception
The BBC called the album the band's "most consistently brilliant work yet in every aspect, and another start-to-finish showcase of rare genius".[4] The Quietus called it "probably their best, certainly their most consistent album".[5]
Notes
- Bisodol is a brand of indigestion tablet [6]
- Crimond is a village in Aberdeenshire, Scotland; whose name was adopted for a hymn tune by Jessie Seymour Irvine, most associated with a verse paraphrase of Psalm 23, "The Lord's my shepherd, I'll not want" [7]
- The alleged producer, Nelson Burt, was a nine-year-old boy (son of Albin R. Burt) who drowned in the Mersey Hurricane of 1822, and whose grave is in the churchyard of St Lawrence's Church, Stoak; as mentioned in the song "The Unfortunate Gwatkin" on the 2014 album Urge for Offal by Half Man Half Biscuit
- The song title "Something's Rotten in the Back of Iceland" parodies the line "Something is rotten in the state of Denmark", spoken by Marcellus in Shakespeare's play Hamlet, Act 1 Scene 4
- The song title "Excavating Rita" parodies that of the 1980 play Educating Rita by Willy Russell (born 1947)
- The song title "L'enfer c'est les autres" is a quotation from the 1944 existentialist French play Huis Clos by Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–80); in English, "Hell is other people"
- "Wools" is a shortening of Woollybacks, an expression in Merseyside English which refers to people from neighbouring areas [8]
References
External links
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