Sunny Day Real Estate (album)

Sunny Day Real Estate
Studio album by Sunny Day Real Estate
Released November 7, 1995
Recorded 1993-1995
Genre Emo, alternative rock, indie rock
Length 37:13
47:10 (re-issue)
Label Sub Pop
Producer Brad Wood
Sunny Day Real Estate chronology
Diary
(1994)
Sunny Day Real Estate
(1995)
How It Feels to Be Something On
(1998)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Drowned In Sound(6/10) link
Pitchfork Media(7.8/10) link
Sputnikmusic link
Emotional Breakdown link

Sunny Day Real Estate is the second studio album by alternative rock band Sunny Day Real Estate. The band's label, Sub Pop, distributed the album under the title LP2. Due to its simple pink cover, the album is often referred to as "The Pink Album".

The album was remastered and reissued in 2009, with bonus tracks and newly written liner notes.[1] The bonus tracks are "Spade and Parade" (originally a B-side of the song "Friday") and "Bucket of Chicken" (released as a B-side to the song "How It Feels to be Something On").[2]

Overview

The album is entirely covered in pink, with the band's name across the cover in small type, and doesn't include any liner notes. The cover's simple design and nickname is a reference to The Beatles' eponymous 1968 double album, known as "The White Album". This album was released in November 1995, several months after the band's first break-up.

"8" and "Friday" were re-recorded for the album. Both songs had been recorded and released previously on 7-inch singles. The final track, "Rodeo Jones", was recorded during the sessions for the previous album, Diary, and was previously released as a b-side on the "In Circles" promo single. In addition, "8" is featured on the Batman Forever soundtrack.

In November 1995, Sub Pop released the band's second album, bearing only the label Sunny Day Real Estate. The album was released without cover art or liner notes, and was distributed by Sub Pop as LP2. It has also occasionally been referred to as "The Pink Album", a reference to its solid pink cover. When Sub Pop contacted the band for artwork for the release, the band had nothing to offer, so Goldsmith suggested that they "make it pink". The album included the songs recorded during the brief sessions, as well as tracks such as "Rodeo Jones" that were recorded during the sessions for Diary.

Enigk confessed in an interview in December 2008 that because the band had already broken up during the recording of LP2, he and Hoerner never sat down to complete the lyrics; "We broke up and we just felt like we were done. We put no energy into the artwork or into anything. On a lot of songs, there aren’t lyrics! In a lot of cases, we never sat down to write them, because we just wanted to get it out of the way as fast as possible. So I just sang a lot of gibberish, which makes it really quirky. My favorite is the Japanese translations".[3]

"Red Elephant" was ranked at number 44 on Spin's "The 95 Best Alternative Rock Songs of 1995" list.[4]

Track listing

  1. "Friday" – 2:29
  2. "Theo B" – 3:05
  3. "Red Elephant" – 3:19
  4. "5/4" – 3:33
  5. "Waffle" – 4:25
  6. "8" – 5:28
  7. "Iscarabaid" – 4:47
  8. "J'Nuh" – 4:52
  9. "Rodeo Jones" – 5:09
  10. "Spade and Parade" – 4:27 (reissue bonus track)
  11. "Bucket of Chicken" – 5:29 (reissue bonus track)

Demos

The band recorded demos for all the songs on the album except for "Rodeo Jones", which had already been demoed and recorded at the Diary sessions. "The Crow" was later re-recorded as "Bucket Of Chicken" and released as a b-side to the song "How It Feels To Be Something On" in 1998. Only one tape from those sessions has surfaced. The demos for "J'nuh" and "Iscarabaid" are instrumental.[5] The tracklist is as follows:

  1. "Theo B"
  2. "5/4"
  3. "Red Elephant"
  4. "Friday"
  5. "Waffle"
  6. "8"
  7. "J'nuh"
  8. "Iscarabaid"
  9. "The Crow"

Personnel

Chart positions

Album

Year Chart Position
1995 Heatseekers 25

References

  1. "Sub Pop Records". Subpop.com. Retrieved 2012-03-11.
  2. Sub Pop LP2 re-release details
  3. Archived October 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  4. D.W. (August 6, 2015). "The 95 Best Alternative Rock Songs of 1995". Spin. p. 3. Retrieved August 7, 2015.
  5. "enigk.com". enigk.com. Retrieved 2012-03-11.
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