1982 studio album by The Damned
Strawberries is the fifth studio album by English punk rock band the Damned. It was released in October 1982 by record label Bronze. Limited editions included a strawberry-scented lyric insert. The album reached No. 15 in the UK charts,[7]the band`s first to reach the Top 20.[8]
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Ignite
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The Damned • 1982
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4:53 |
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Generals
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The Damned • 1982
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3:23 |
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Stranger On The Town
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5:15 |
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Dozen Girls
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The Damned • 1982
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4:33 |
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The Dog
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The Damned • 1982
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7:21 |
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Gun Fury (of Riot Forces)
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The Damned • 1982
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2:57 |
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Pleasure And The Pain
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The Damned • 1982
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3:52 |
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Life Goes On
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The Damned • 1982
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4:03 |
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Bad Time For Bonzo
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The Damned • 1982
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3:48 |
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Under The Floor Again
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The Damned • 1982
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5:04 |
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Don't Bother Me
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The Damned • 1982
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2:11 |
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The Missing Link
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The Damned • 1982
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0:31 |
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Lovely Money (extended)
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The Damned • 1982
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6:56 |
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I Think I'm Wonderful
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The Damned • 1982
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2:56 |
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Take That
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The Damned • 1982
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2:48 |
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Mine's A Large One Landlord
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The Damned • 1982
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1:15 |
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Torture Me
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The Damned • 1982
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1:24 |
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Disguise
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The Damned • 1982
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3:29 |
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Rat Vs The Omni
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The Damned • 1982
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0:45 |
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Citadel Zombies
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The Damned • 1982
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1:58 |
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Bimbo Jingle
the damned •
The Damned • 1982
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0:08 |
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Strawberries | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | October 1982 | |||
Recorded | Mid-1982 | |||
Studio | Rockfield (Monmouth, Wales) | |||
Genre | psychedelic pop[5][6] | |||
Length | 48:12 | |||
Label | Bronze | |||
Producer |
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The Damned chronology | ||||
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Singles from Strawberries | ||||
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1982 studio album by The Damned
Strawberries is the fifth studio album by English punk rock band the Damned. It was released in October 1982 by record label Bronze. Limited editions included a strawberry-scented lyric insert. The album reached No. 15 in the UK charts,[7]the band`s first to reach the Top 20.[8]
Leer másThe record was released as the Damned were enjoying a higher public profile, thanks to the solo success of Captain Sensible. Sensible performed lead vocals on "Life Goes On" and "Don`t Bother Me". He also introduced new instruments to the band, including sitar, and cello played by his then-girlfriend, Rachael Bor of the pop group Dolly Mixture.
While Strawberries was generally praised for its positive, up-beat melodies, the album marked a time of conflict and division within the band. During the recording, bassist Paul Gray fought with drummer Rat Scabies over management and song-writing responsibilities.[9] Gray would leave the band in February 1983 (later replacing Billy Sheehan in UFO), and Bryn Merrick took over on bass. Keyboard player Roman Jugg officially became the Damned`s fifth band member. His arrival led to further experiments with the band`s sound, including loops and sampling. Jugg would later move to guitar, replacing Sensible, who left the band after the Strawberries concert tour.
In 1982 Robert Fripp of King Crimson joined the Damned in the studio during the recording of this album. However, the only track they recorded together, "Fun Factory", was left off the album and did not receive any official release until 1990. Robert also joined the band on stage for a few songs on 11 October 1982 at the Hammersmith Odeon. A bootleg of this concert is available but is of low quality.
The album`s working title was Strawberries for Pigs, a name inspired by the reception the band`s newer music received from some of their older fans. As Vanian explained, "we were playing a lot of new material, and we had an audience that didn`t want to hear about anything, they just wanted to hear "Neat Neat Neat" and "New Rose," nothing else. And they wanted to just smash everything. And they weren`t interested in hearing music at all. So at one point, I turned around and said, `It`s like giving strawberries to a fucking pig, this gig, you know?` And that stuck in our minds, and we used it".[9]
Vanian said that the song "The Dog" was inspired by Anne Rice`s `Interview With The Vampire", he explained "On reading Anne Rice`s `interview with the Vampire` in 1976, I penned the song which became known as `The Dog` but was actually about the strange vampire child Claudia, described in Rice`s book. The idea of an adult`s mind trapped in a child`s body was too fascinating to resist."[10]
As an easter egg, the band included various sounds at the end of different tracks, including an egg whisk and a pair of jeans being ripped. At the end of the track "Bad Time for Bonzo", a sound of a flushing toilet was used.[11]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [4] |
Sounds | [12] |
Critics praised the album`s musicianship and 60s influences. Writing in Smash Hits, Fred Dellar gave the album 9 out of 10: "The Damned go totally melodic, offer harmony vocals, employ cellos, sitars and brass sections, and even remember to include a lyric sheet […] This is the kind of pop album Paul McCartney would be pleased to have his moniker on".[13]
In Sounds, Steve Keaton wrote that "Strawberries is the Damned at their most melodic and subversive". He added that the album "manages to indulge both Dave Vanian’s darkly obsessive Gothic vision and the good Captain`s psychedelic whims without sacrificing any hard rock sensibilities. `Strawberries` should be the LP to grant the Damned the recognition they`ve courted for so long".
[2]
Trouser Press described the album as "eclectic and inconsistent but well-produced [...] and boasting some fine tunes [...], [Strawberries] shows Sensible`s increasing pop prominence [...] and Vanian`s willingness to explore a stylistic Pallette with no debt to punk".[3] Other critics have noted the album`s embrace of psychedelic pop,[14][15] as well as gothic rock.[16][17][18]
In a negative contemporary review, NME called Strawberries "a miserable (w)retch of a record, spewing fourth enough nauseous `nostalgia` to fill a book entitled `Why The Damned Never Made It`, without once touching any spirit. It seems they`re doomed to regurgitating their history `til the aftertaste becomes too bad to bear".[19]
AllMusic`s retrospective review was favourable: "Recuperating a bit from The Black Album`s uneven impact while still aiming to try whatever they want in studio, [...] [Strawberries is] by turns sprightly and cheerful, dark and dramatic, energetic and snarling, or all that and more at once, [...] [and] defies usual expectations to be yet another good rock album from the band".[4]
On 7 January 2005, Castle Records re-released Strawberries in the United Kingdom on CD. On October 7, 2022, Iconoclassic Records issued a 40th Anniversary 2 CD Edition of Strawberries remastered by Mark Wilder, including 15 bonus tracks and new liner notes by Jack Rabid of The Big Takeover.[20]
Credits adapted from the album`s liner notes.[21]
All tracks are written by Rat Scabies, Captain Sensible, Paul Gray and Dave Vanian, except as noted
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Ignite" | 4:53 | |
2. | "Generals" | 3:24 | |
3. | "Stranger on the Town" | 5:14 | |
4. | "Dozen Girls" | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Billy Karloff | 4:34 |
5. | "The Dog" | 7:25 | |
6. | "Gun Fury (of Riot Forces)" | 2:57 | |
7. | "Pleasure and the Pain" | 4:23 | |
8. | "Life Goes On" | 4:09 | |
9. | "Bad Time for Bonzo" | 3:29 | |
10. | "Under the Floor Again" | 5:29 | |
11. | "Don`t Bother Me" | 2:10 | |
Total length: | 48:12 |
Note
Some versions of Strawberries have altered songwriting credits.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
13. | "Lovely Money (extended version)" (non-album single) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Randy MacDonald | 6:56 |
14. | "I Think I`m Wonderful" (B-side) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, MacDonald | 2:55 |
15. | "Take That" (B-side) | 2:47 | |
16. | "Mine`s a Large One Landlord" (B-side) | 1:16 | |
17. | "Torture Me" (B-side) | 1:24 | |
18. | "Disguise" (B-side) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Roman Jugg | 3:28 |
19. | "Rat vs. The Omni" (previously unreleased) | Scabies | 0:45 |
20. | "Citadel Zombies" (B-side) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Jugg | 1:58 |
21. | "Bimbo Jingle" (previously unreleased) | Scabies | 0:08 |
Total length: | 69:29 |
Notes
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Fun Factory" (non-album single) | Sensible | 4:02 |
2. | "Lovely Money" (non-album single) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Randy MacDonald | 5:22 |
3. | "I Think I`m Wonderful" (B-side) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Jones | 2:55 |
4. | "Lovely Money - Disco Mix" (B-side) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Randy MacDonald | 6:57 |
5. | "Dozen Girls (7" Version)" (non-album single with alternate lyrics) | Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Gray, Billy Karloff | 3:49 |
6. | "Take That" (B-side) | 2:47 | |
7. | "Mine`s a Large One Landlord" (B-side) | 1:18 | |
8. | "Torture Me" (B-side) | 1:21 | |
9. | "Disguise" (B-side) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Roman Jugg | 3:27 |
10. | "Citadel Zombies" (B-side, original 7" version first time on CD) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Roman Jugg | 3:19 |
11. | "Ignite" (live in Newcastle) | 5:32 | |
12. | "Disco Man" (live in Newcastle) | 2:56 | |
13. | "Generals" (live in Newcastle) | 3:14 | |
14. | "Bad Time For Bonzo" (live in Newcastle) | 3:36 | |
15. | "Dozen Girls" (live in Newcastle) | Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Gray, Billy Karloff | 3:54 |
Total length: | 54:31 |
Notes
The Damned
Additional musicians
Technical
1982 studio album by The Damned
Strawberries is the fifth studio album by English punk rock band the Damned. It was released in October 1982 by record label Bronze. Limited editions included a strawberry-scented lyric insert. The album reached No. 15 in the UK charts,[7]the band`s first to reach the Top 20.[8]
The record was released as the Damned were enjoying a higher public profile, thanks to the solo success of Captain Sensible. Sensible performed lead vocals on "Life Goes On" and "Don`t Bother Me". He also introduced new instruments to the band, including sitar, and cello played by his then-girlfriend, Rachael Bor of the pop group Dolly Mixture.
While Strawberries was generally praised for its positive, up-beat melodies, the album marked a time of conflict and division within the band. During the recording, bassist Paul Gray fought with drummer Rat Scabies over management and song-writing responsibilities.[9] Gray would leave the band in February 1983 (later replacing Billy Sheehan in UFO), and Bryn Merrick took over on bass. Keyboard player Roman Jugg officially became the Damned`s fifth band member. His arrival led to further experiments with the band`s sound, including loops and sampling. Jugg would later move to guitar, replacing Sensible, who left the band after the Strawberries concert tour.
In 1982 Robert Fripp of King Crimson joined the Damned in the studio during the recording of this album. However, the only track they recorded together, "Fun Factory", was left off the album and did not receive any official release until 1990. Robert also joined the band on stage for a few songs on 11 October 1982 at the Hammersmith Odeon. A bootleg of this concert is available but is of low quality.
The album`s working title was Strawberries for Pigs, a name inspired by the reception the band`s newer music received from some of their older fans. As Vanian explained, "we were playing a lot of new material, and we had an audience that didn`t want to hear about anything, they just wanted to hear "Neat Neat Neat" and "New Rose," nothing else. And they wanted to just smash everything. And they weren`t interested in hearing music at all. So at one point, I turned around and said, `It`s like giving strawberries to a fucking pig, this gig, you know?` And that stuck in our minds, and we used it".[9]
Vanian said that the song "The Dog" was inspired by Anne Rice`s `Interview With The Vampire", he explained "On reading Anne Rice`s `interview with the Vampire` in 1976, I penned the song which became known as `The Dog` but was actually about the strange vampire child Claudia, described in Rice`s book. The idea of an adult`s mind trapped in a child`s body was too fascinating to resist."[10]
As an easter egg, the band included various sounds at the end of different tracks, including an egg whisk and a pair of jeans being ripped. At the end of the track "Bad Time for Bonzo", a sound of a flushing toilet was used.[11]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [4] |
Sounds | [12] |
Critics praised the album`s musicianship and 60s influences. Writing in Smash Hits, Fred Dellar gave the album 9 out of 10: "The Damned go totally melodic, offer harmony vocals, employ cellos, sitars and brass sections, and even remember to include a lyric sheet […] This is the kind of pop album Paul McCartney would be pleased to have his moniker on".[13]
In Sounds, Steve Keaton wrote that "Strawberries is the Damned at their most melodic and subversive". He added that the album "manages to indulge both Dave Vanian’s darkly obsessive Gothic vision and the good Captain`s psychedelic whims without sacrificing any hard rock sensibilities. `Strawberries` should be the LP to grant the Damned the recognition they`ve courted for so long".
[2]
Trouser Press described the album as "eclectic and inconsistent but well-produced [...] and boasting some fine tunes [...], [Strawberries] shows Sensible`s increasing pop prominence [...] and Vanian`s willingness to explore a stylistic Pallette with no debt to punk".[3] Other critics have noted the album`s embrace of psychedelic pop,[14][15] as well as gothic rock.[16][17][18]
In a negative contemporary review, NME called Strawberries "a miserable (w)retch of a record, spewing fourth enough nauseous `nostalgia` to fill a book entitled `Why The Damned Never Made It`, without once touching any spirit. It seems they`re doomed to regurgitating their history `til the aftertaste becomes too bad to bear".[19]
AllMusic`s retrospective review was favourable: "Recuperating a bit from The Black Album`s uneven impact while still aiming to try whatever they want in studio, [...] [Strawberries is] by turns sprightly and cheerful, dark and dramatic, energetic and snarling, or all that and more at once, [...] [and] defies usual expectations to be yet another good rock album from the band".[4]
On 7 January 2005, Castle Records re-released Strawberries in the United Kingdom on CD. On October 7, 2022, Iconoclassic Records issued a 40th Anniversary 2 CD Edition of Strawberries remastered by Mark Wilder, including 15 bonus tracks and new liner notes by Jack Rabid of The Big Takeover.[20]
Credits adapted from the album`s liner notes.[21]
All tracks are written by Rat Scabies, Captain Sensible, Paul Gray and Dave Vanian, except as noted
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Ignite" | 4:53 | |
2. | "Generals" | 3:24 | |
3. | "Stranger on the Town" | 5:14 | |
4. | "Dozen Girls" | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Billy Karloff | 4:34 |
5. | "The Dog" | 7:25 | |
6. | "Gun Fury (of Riot Forces)" | 2:57 | |
7. | "Pleasure and the Pain" | 4:23 | |
8. | "Life Goes On" | 4:09 | |
9. | "Bad Time for Bonzo" | 3:29 | |
10. | "Under the Floor Again" | 5:29 | |
11. | "Don`t Bother Me" | 2:10 | |
Total length: | 48:12 |
Note
Some versions of Strawberries have altered songwriting credits.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
13. | "Lovely Money (extended version)" (non-album single) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Randy MacDonald | 6:56 |
14. | "I Think I`m Wonderful" (B-side) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, MacDonald | 2:55 |
15. | "Take That" (B-side) | 2:47 | |
16. | "Mine`s a Large One Landlord" (B-side) | 1:16 | |
17. | "Torture Me" (B-side) | 1:24 | |
18. | "Disguise" (B-side) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Roman Jugg | 3:28 |
19. | "Rat vs. The Omni" (previously unreleased) | Scabies | 0:45 |
20. | "Citadel Zombies" (B-side) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Jugg | 1:58 |
21. | "Bimbo Jingle" (previously unreleased) | Scabies | 0:08 |
Total length: | 69:29 |
Notes
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Fun Factory" (non-album single) | Sensible | 4:02 |
2. | "Lovely Money" (non-album single) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Randy MacDonald | 5:22 |
3. | "I Think I`m Wonderful" (B-side) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Jones | 2:55 |
4. | "Lovely Money - Disco Mix" (B-side) | Scabies, Sensible, Gray, Vanian, Randy MacDonald | 6:57 |
5. | "Dozen Girls (7" Version)" (non-album single with alternate lyrics) | Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Gray, Billy Karloff | 3:49 |
6. | "Take That" (B-side) | 2:47 | |
7. | "Mine`s a Large One Landlord" (B-side) | 1:18 | |
8. | "Torture Me" (B-side) | 1:21 | |
9. | "Disguise" (B-side) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Roman Jugg | 3:27 |
10. | "Citadel Zombies" (B-side, original 7" version first time on CD) | Sensible, Scabies, Gray, Vanian, Roman Jugg | 3:19 |
11. | "Ignite" (live in Newcastle) | 5:32 | |
12. | "Disco Man" (live in Newcastle) | 2:56 | |
13. | "Generals" (live in Newcastle) | 3:14 | |
14. | "Bad Time For Bonzo" (live in Newcastle) | 3:36 | |
15. | "Dozen Girls" (live in Newcastle) | Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Gray, Billy Karloff | 3:54 |
Total length: | 54:31 |
Notes
The Damned
Additional musicians
Technical