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Videos Album: Rocks1998

"Rocks"
Single by Primal Scream
from the album Give Out But Don`t Give Up
A-side"Funky Jam" (Hot Ass mix)
B-side"Everybody Needs Somebody"
Released28 February 1994 (1994-02-28)
GenreAlternative rock[1]
Length3:36
LabelCreation
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Tom Dowd
Primal Scream singles chronology
"Damaged"
(1992)
"Rocks" / "Funky Jam"
(1994)
"Jailbird"
(1994)

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Rocks
Tags

Singles chronology

Rocks
Rocks
0/0/1998

Rocks

Rod Stewart

1998 Single
  • Released: 1998 · Fecha Grabación: 1998 -
    Label: Creation · · Productor: Tom Dowd

    "Rocks" is a song by the Scottish rock band Primal Scream from their fourth studio album, Give Out But Don`t Give Up (1994). This track was the first indication of the band`s evolution in musical genre, contrasting with the approaches utilized in Primal Scream`s previous album, titled Screamadelica, which had gotten released in 1991 and featured dance-related leanings. "Rocks" (and the Give Out But Don`t Give Up album as a whole) featured a more bluesy hard rock approach akin to arena-friendly songs of the past, being inspired by British artists such as T. Rex, the Rolling Stones, and Faces.

    "Rocks" was released as a single on 28 February 1994, and the track reached the number seven spot on the UK Singles Chart. It had served as a double A-side with another of the band`s songs, which the group titled "Funky Jam". Together, they were the highest-charting Primal Scream single until "Country Girl" reached number five in 2006. In 2024, the song received a gold certification from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales and streams exceeding 400,000.

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    Review

    "Rocks" is a song by the Scottish rock band Primal Scream from their fourth studio album, Give Out But Don`t Give Up (1994). This track was the first indication of the band`s evolution in musical genre, contrasting with the approaches utilized in Primal Scream`s previous album, titled Screamadelica, which had gotten released in 1991 and featured dance-related leanings. "Rocks" (and the Give Out But Don`t Give Up album as a whole) featured a more bluesy hard rock approach akin to arena-friendly songs of the past, being inspired by British artists such as T. Rex, the Rolling Stones, and Faces.

    "Rocks" was released as a single on 28 February 1994, and the track reached the number seven spot on the UK Singles Chart. It had served as a double A-side with another of the band`s songs, which the group titled "Funky Jam". Together, they were the highest-charting Primal Scream single until "Country Girl" reached number five in 2006. In 2024, the song received a gold certification from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales and streams exceeding 400,000.

    Leer más

    Critical reception

    In retrospective terms, music journalist Steve Huey (who has also been associated with AllMusic) highlighted the song as a part of a musical trend involving "guitar-oriented, post-Nirvana alternative rock" performed "by bands who received some measure of radio or [even] MTV exposure". He described Primal Scream in the context of "Rocks" as one of a group of "groundbreaking cult artists who scored at least a little crossover success in the alternative mainstream" alongside bands such as the Afghan Whigs, Dinosaur Jr., and Screaming Trees.[1] Similarly, Johnny Loftus (of the same publication) retrospectively described "Rocks" as sounding "raucous" and wrote in a supportive yet glib fashion that the song "is sure to please your English foreign exchange student friend."[2]

    Track listings

    All tracks were written by Bobby Gillespie, Andrew Innes, and Robert Young.

    UK 7-inch and cassette single[3][4]

    1. "Rocks" – 3:36
    2. "Funky Jam" (Hot Ass mix) – 5:21

    UK 12-inch and CD single; Japanese CD single[5][6][7]

    1. "Rocks" – 3:36
    2. "Funky Jam" (Hot Ass mix) – 5:21
    3. "Funky Jam" (club mix) – 5:27

    US and New Zealand 7-inch single[8]

    1. "Rocks" (album version) – 3:36
    2. "Everybody Needs Somebody" (album version) – 5:22

    Charts

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    United Kingdom (BPI)[25]

    Gold

    400,000‡

    ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

    Release history

    Region

    Date

    Format(s)

    Label(s)

    Ref.

    United Kingdom

    28 February 1994

    • 7-inch vinyl
    • 12-inch vinyl
    • CD
    • cassette

    Creation

    [26]

    Japan

    24 March 1994

    CD

    [27]

    Cover versions

    The Faces` Rod Stewart would later cover the song, including a version on his 1998 album When We Were the New Boys. Music journalist Stephen Thomas Erlewine highlighted the peculiarity of Stewart "tackling the music of his Brit-pop offspring" while praising the track for AllMusic. Erlewine directly compared the artist`s assertive interpretation of "Rocks" to Stewart`s previously released song "Hot Legs".[28]

    See also

    • 1994 in British music
    • Alternative rock
    • Hard rock
    • "Hot Legs"
    • Primal Scream discography

    "Rocks" is a song by the Scottish rock band Primal Scream from their fourth studio album, Give Out But Don`t Give Up (1994). This track was the first indication of the band`s evolution in musical genre, contrasting with the approaches utilized in Primal Scream`s previous album, titled Screamadelica, which had gotten released in 1991 and featured dance-related leanings. "Rocks" (and the Give Out But Don`t Give Up album as a whole) featured a more bluesy hard rock approach akin to arena-friendly songs of the past, being inspired by British artists such as T. Rex, the Rolling Stones, and Faces.

    "Rocks" was released as a single on 28 February 1994, and the track reached the number seven spot on the UK Singles Chart. It had served as a double A-side with another of the band`s songs, which the group titled "Funky Jam". Together, they were the highest-charting Primal Scream single until "Country Girl" reached number five in 2006. In 2024, the song received a gold certification from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales and streams exceeding 400,000.

    Critical reception

    In retrospective terms, music journalist Steve Huey (who has also been associated with AllMusic) highlighted the song as a part of a musical trend involving "guitar-oriented, post-Nirvana alternative rock" performed "by bands who received some measure of radio or [even] MTV exposure". He described Primal Scream in the context of "Rocks" as one of a group of "groundbreaking cult artists who scored at least a little crossover success in the alternative mainstream" alongside bands such as the Afghan Whigs, Dinosaur Jr., and Screaming Trees.[1] Similarly, Johnny Loftus (of the same publication) retrospectively described "Rocks" as sounding "raucous" and wrote in a supportive yet glib fashion that the song "is sure to please your English foreign exchange student friend."[2]

    Track listings

    All tracks were written by Bobby Gillespie, Andrew Innes, and Robert Young.

    UK 7-inch and cassette single[3][4]

    1. "Rocks" – 3:36
    2. "Funky Jam" (Hot Ass mix) – 5:21

    UK 12-inch and CD single; Japanese CD single[5][6][7]

    1. "Rocks" – 3:36
    2. "Funky Jam" (Hot Ass mix) – 5:21
    3. "Funky Jam" (club mix) – 5:27

    US and New Zealand 7-inch single[8]

    1. "Rocks" (album version) – 3:36
    2. "Everybody Needs Somebody" (album version) – 5:22

    Charts

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    United Kingdom (BPI)[25]

    Gold

    400,000‡

    ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

    Release history

    Region

    Date

    Format(s)

    Label(s)

    Ref.

    United Kingdom

    28 February 1994

    • 7-inch vinyl
    • 12-inch vinyl
    • CD
    • cassette

    Creation

    [26]

    Japan

    24 March 1994

    CD

    [27]

    Cover versions

    The Faces` Rod Stewart would later cover the song, including a version on his 1998 album When We Were the New Boys. Music journalist Stephen Thomas Erlewine highlighted the peculiarity of Stewart "tackling the music of his Brit-pop offspring" while praising the track for AllMusic. Erlewine directly compared the artist`s assertive interpretation of "Rocks" to Stewart`s previously released song "Hot Legs".[28]

    See also

    • 1994 in British music
    • Alternative rock
    • Hard rock
    • "Hot Legs"
    • Primal Scream discography

    Albums