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Álbums chronology

Brain Drain
Brain Drain
23/5/1989
Mondo Bizarro
Mondo Bizarro
1/9/1992
Acid Eaters
Acid Eaters
1/12/1993

Mondo Bizarro

The Ramones

1992 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 1 Septiembre 1992 · Fecha Grabación: Enero 1992 - Febrero 1992
    Discográfica: Radioactive · Estudio de grabación: Magic Shop, New York City; Baby Monster, New York City · Productor: Ed Stasium
    1
    Censorshit
    RAMONES • 1992
    3:12
  • 2
    The Job That Ate My Brain
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:17
  • 3
    Poison Heart
    RAMONES • 1992
    4:03
  • 4
    Anxiety
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:04
  • 5
    Strength to Endure
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:58
  • 6
    It's Gonna Be Alright
    RAMONES • 1992
    3:19
  • 7
    Take It as It Comes
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:07
  • 8
    Main Man
    RAMONES • 1992
    3:27
  • 9
    Tomorrow She Goes Away
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:41
  • 10
    I Won't Let It Happen
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:20
  • 11
    Cabbies on Crack
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:59
  • 12
    Heidi Is a Headcase
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:46
  • 13
    Touring
    RAMONES • 1992
    2:51
  • Singles


    No se encontraron resultados

    Singles

    Brain Drain
    Brain Drain
    23/5/1989
    Mondo Bizarro
    Mondo Bizarro
    1/9/1992
    Acid Eaters
    Acid Eaters
    1/12/1993
    Mondo Bizarro
    Studio album by
    ReleasedSeptember 1, 1992
    RecordedJanuary–February 1992[1]
    Studio
    • Magic Shop, New York City
    • Baby Monster, New York City
    GenrePunk rock
    Length37:25
    LabelRadioactive
    ProducerEd Stasium
    Ramones chronology
    Brain Drain
    (1989)
    Mondo Bizarro
    (1992)
    Acid Eaters
    (1993)
    Singles from Mondo Bizarro
    1. "Poison Heart"
      Released: 1992[2]
    2. "Strength to Endure"
      Released: 1992 (promo)[3]
    3. "Touring"
      Released: 1992 (promo)[4]

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    1992 studio album by the Ramones

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[5]
    Robert ChristgauA−[8]
    Entertainment WeeklyB−[6]
    Q[7]
    Rock Hard6.0/10[10]
    Rolling Stone[9]
    Spin Alternative Record Guide6/10[11]

    Mondo Bizarro (a misspelled version of "Mondo Bizzarro", meaning "Weird World" in Italian) is the twelfth studio album by American punk rock band Ramones, released on September 1, 1992, by Radioactive Records. It is the first studio album to feature their new bassist, C.J. Ramone, who replaced original member Dee Dee Ramone (although he still featured on this album and the band`s subsequent albums as a songwriter). The album was re-released in the UK by the Captain Oi! record label on August 10, 2004, with the band`s cover of the Spider-Man theme song included as a bonus track.

    Background

    Mondo Bizarro was the Ramones` first studio album in three years, after the band left Sire Records for a new contract with Radioactive Records. The title was taken from the film of the same name, a 1966 sequel to the film Mondo Cane.

    In his 1998 autobiography, Dee Dee Ramone noted that, while he had left the band, he sold them the publishing for three new compositions—"Poison Heart", "Main Man" and "Strength to Endure"—to pay for a lawyer to help get him out of jail, following an arrest for possession of marijuana. He added, "I don`t know why no one in New York, or none of the Ramones, couldn`t have loaned me a few thousand dollars, instead of forcing me to go through all the paranoia, confusion and extra pain of a maneuver like that. [...] It seemed that the Ramones couldn`t live without me, but at the same time they treated me like an enemy."[12] "Poison Heart" and "Strength to Endure" were released as the album`s singles, in June and October 1992, respectively.[citation needed]

    In a 1992 interview for an Argentinian newspaper, Johnny Ramone said of the album, "Generally I always find two or three songs that I hate. From Mondo Bizarro, I really like almost all the songs and I am very satisfied with the result."[13] However, when he was interviewed about the album for the 2003 documentary End of the Century, he stated, "I don`t like it. I don`t like it at all." In Johnny`s 2012 autobiography, Commando, he awarded the album (along with its predecessor, 1989`s Brain Drain) a "C" grade, stating, "we needed more Dee Dee songs on it. [...] The songs are the weak spots on the album. [...] C.J. was in the band, but his writing wasn`t up to par yet."[14]

    Songs

    The song "Censorshit" was written by Joey Ramone about how rock and rap albums were being censored by the Parents Music Resource Center, a group of politicians` wives who sought to put parental advisory warning labels on records, a practice which has since become standard. It has a reference to Ozzy Osbourne and Frank Zappa in the line, "Ask Ozzy, Zappa, or me, we`ll show you what it`s like to be free." The song is addressed to Tipper Gore, who was the wife of then-Tennessee Senator and eventual Vice President of the United States, Al Gore. In his book Commando, Johnny Ramone stated that he "didn`t like the lyrics on `Censorshit.` It was stupid. I liked the song, though. Joey wrote this song about Vice President Al Gore`s wife, Tipper Gore, then he went on and voted for Bill Clinton."[14]

    "Heidi Is a Headcase" was written by Joey Ramone and Daniel Rey. According to an interview on the podcast Ramones of the Day, C.J. Ramone stated that the song was about a girl named Heidi, whom both Joey and C.J. had dated for a period of time.[15]

    "Take It as It Comes" is a cover song, originally recorded by the Doors for their 1967 debut album. The 2004 CD reissue bonus track, "Spiderman", is a cover of the theme song from the original Spider-Man animated series. It was originally released as an unlisted bonus track on initial releases of the Ramones` 1995 album ?Adios Amigos! (omitted on later editions), and a slightly different version was available on the 1995 various artists compilation album Saturday Morning: Cartoons` Greatest Hits.

    Reception

    Although Mondo Bizarro was considered to be a "comeback"[16][17] for the Ramones—following both lineup and label changes, and the dwindling sales of their previous albums from the mid-to-late 1980s (up to and including Brain Drain, which was originally meant to be the band`s "comeback")[18]—the album peaked at number 190 on the Billboard 200 chart, the lowest chart position in their career.[19] However, the album`s lead single, "Poison Heart", did become one of the Ramones` top ten hits in their native America, peaking at number six on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[20] The album was certified gold in Brazil in 2001.[21]

    Robert Christgau, who gave it a positive review, stated: "More like an old country singer (George Jones leaving Epic, say) than the world`s greatest rock and roll band (greater than Mick`s side project, anyway), Joey and whoever [...] do right by their formula. Reasons to believe: the Dee Dee ballad Joey sings, and the Beach Boys tribute that goes, `Touring, touring, it`s never boring.`"[8]

    Track listing

    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Censorshit"Joey Ramone3:13
    2."The Job That Ate My Brain"Marky Ramone, Garrett Uhlenbrock2:17
    3."Poison Heart"Dee Dee Ramone, Daniel Rey4:04
    4."Anxiety"Marky Ramone, Uhlenbrock2:04
    5."Strength to Endure"Dee Dee Ramone, Rey2:59
    6."It`s Gonna Be Alright"Joey Ramone, Andy Shernoff3:20
    7."Take It as It Comes"Jim Morrison, John Densmore, Robby Krieger, Ray Manzarek2:07
    8."Main Man"Dee Dee Ramone, Rey3:29
    9."Tomorrow She Goes Away"Joey Ramone, Rey2:41
    10."I Won`t Let It Happen"Joey Ramone, Shernoff2:22
    11."Cabbies on Crack"Joey Ramone3:01
    12."Heidi Is a Headcase"Joey Ramone, Rey2:57
    13."Touring"Joey Ramone2:51

    2004 Captain Oi! CD bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    14."Spiderman"Bob Harris, Paul Francis Webster1:56

    Personnel

    Ramones

    • Joey Ramone – lead vocals (tracks 1–4, 6, 7, 9–14)
    • Johnny Ramone – guitar
    • Marky Ramone – drums
    • C.J. Ramone – bass guitar, lead vocals (tracks 5, 8)

    Additional musicians

    • Vernon Reid – guitar solo (track 11)
    • Joe McGinty – keyboards (track 7)
    • Flo & Eddie – backing vocals (tracks 3, 13)
    • Daniel Rey – additional guitar (uncredited)[22][23]
    • Andy Shernoff – additional guitar (uncredited)[22][23]
    • Ed Stasium – additional guitar (uncredited)[24]

    Technical

    • Ed Stasium – producer, mixing
    • Gary Kurfirst – executive producer
    • Paul Hamingson – engineer, mixing assistant
    • Greg Calbi – mastering
    • Joe Warda – assistant engineer (The Magic Shop)
    • Bryce Goggin – assistant engineer (Baby Monster)
    • Garris Shipon – assistant engineer (Baby Monster)
    • UE Nastasi – assistant mixing engineer (East Hill)
    • George DuBose – art direction, photography, design

    Charts

    Album

    Chart (1992)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (ARIA)[25]

    93

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[26]

    11

    Japanese Albums (Oricon)[27]

    69

    Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[28]

    41

    US Billboard 200[29]

    190

    Singles

    Year

    Single

    Chart

    Position

    1992

    "Poison Heart"

    Modern Rock Tracks

    6[20]

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Argentina (CAPIF)[30]

    Gold

    30,000^

    Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[31]

    Gold

    100,000*

    * Sales figures based on certification alone.
    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1992 studio album by the Ramones

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[5]
    Robert ChristgauA−[8]
    Entertainment WeeklyB−[6]
    Q[7]
    Rock Hard6.0/10[10]
    Rolling Stone[9]
    Spin Alternative Record Guide6/10[11]

    Mondo Bizarro (a misspelled version of "Mondo Bizzarro", meaning "Weird World" in Italian) is the twelfth studio album by American punk rock band Ramones, released on September 1, 1992, by Radioactive Records. It is the first studio album to feature their new bassist, C.J. Ramone, who replaced original member Dee Dee Ramone (although he still featured on this album and the band`s subsequent albums as a songwriter). The album was re-released in the UK by the Captain Oi! record label on August 10, 2004, with the band`s cover of the Spider-Man theme song included as a bonus track.

    Background

    Mondo Bizarro was the Ramones` first studio album in three years, after the band left Sire Records for a new contract with Radioactive Records. The title was taken from the film of the same name, a 1966 sequel to the film Mondo Cane.

    In his 1998 autobiography, Dee Dee Ramone noted that, while he had left the band, he sold them the publishing for three new compositions—"Poison Heart", "Main Man" and "Strength to Endure"—to pay for a lawyer to help get him out of jail, following an arrest for possession of marijuana. He added, "I don`t know why no one in New York, or none of the Ramones, couldn`t have loaned me a few thousand dollars, instead of forcing me to go through all the paranoia, confusion and extra pain of a maneuver like that. [...] It seemed that the Ramones couldn`t live without me, but at the same time they treated me like an enemy."[12] "Poison Heart" and "Strength to Endure" were released as the album`s singles, in June and October 1992, respectively.[citation needed]

    In a 1992 interview for an Argentinian newspaper, Johnny Ramone said of the album, "Generally I always find two or three songs that I hate. From Mondo Bizarro, I really like almost all the songs and I am very satisfied with the result."[13] However, when he was interviewed about the album for the 2003 documentary End of the Century, he stated, "I don`t like it. I don`t like it at all." In Johnny`s 2012 autobiography, Commando, he awarded the album (along with its predecessor, 1989`s Brain Drain) a "C" grade, stating, "we needed more Dee Dee songs on it. [...] The songs are the weak spots on the album. [...] C.J. was in the band, but his writing wasn`t up to par yet."[14]

    Songs

    The song "Censorshit" was written by Joey Ramone about how rock and rap albums were being censored by the Parents Music Resource Center, a group of politicians` wives who sought to put parental advisory warning labels on records, a practice which has since become standard. It has a reference to Ozzy Osbourne and Frank Zappa in the line, "Ask Ozzy, Zappa, or me, we`ll show you what it`s like to be free." The song is addressed to Tipper Gore, who was the wife of then-Tennessee Senator and eventual Vice President of the United States, Al Gore. In his book Commando, Johnny Ramone stated that he "didn`t like the lyrics on `Censorshit.` It was stupid. I liked the song, though. Joey wrote this song about Vice President Al Gore`s wife, Tipper Gore, then he went on and voted for Bill Clinton."[14]

    "Heidi Is a Headcase" was written by Joey Ramone and Daniel Rey. According to an interview on the podcast Ramones of the Day, C.J. Ramone stated that the song was about a girl named Heidi, whom both Joey and C.J. had dated for a period of time.[15]

    "Take It as It Comes" is a cover song, originally recorded by the Doors for their 1967 debut album. The 2004 CD reissue bonus track, "Spiderman", is a cover of the theme song from the original Spider-Man animated series. It was originally released as an unlisted bonus track on initial releases of the Ramones` 1995 album ?Adios Amigos! (omitted on later editions), and a slightly different version was available on the 1995 various artists compilation album Saturday Morning: Cartoons` Greatest Hits.

    Reception

    Although Mondo Bizarro was considered to be a "comeback"[16][17] for the Ramones—following both lineup and label changes, and the dwindling sales of their previous albums from the mid-to-late 1980s (up to and including Brain Drain, which was originally meant to be the band`s "comeback")[18]—the album peaked at number 190 on the Billboard 200 chart, the lowest chart position in their career.[19] However, the album`s lead single, "Poison Heart", did become one of the Ramones` top ten hits in their native America, peaking at number six on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[20] The album was certified gold in Brazil in 2001.[21]

    Robert Christgau, who gave it a positive review, stated: "More like an old country singer (George Jones leaving Epic, say) than the world`s greatest rock and roll band (greater than Mick`s side project, anyway), Joey and whoever [...] do right by their formula. Reasons to believe: the Dee Dee ballad Joey sings, and the Beach Boys tribute that goes, `Touring, touring, it`s never boring.`"[8]

    Track listing

    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Censorshit"Joey Ramone3:13
    2."The Job That Ate My Brain"Marky Ramone, Garrett Uhlenbrock2:17
    3."Poison Heart"Dee Dee Ramone, Daniel Rey4:04
    4."Anxiety"Marky Ramone, Uhlenbrock2:04
    5."Strength to Endure"Dee Dee Ramone, Rey2:59
    6."It`s Gonna Be Alright"Joey Ramone, Andy Shernoff3:20
    7."Take It as It Comes"Jim Morrison, John Densmore, Robby Krieger, Ray Manzarek2:07
    8."Main Man"Dee Dee Ramone, Rey3:29
    9."Tomorrow She Goes Away"Joey Ramone, Rey2:41
    10."I Won`t Let It Happen"Joey Ramone, Shernoff2:22
    11."Cabbies on Crack"Joey Ramone3:01
    12."Heidi Is a Headcase"Joey Ramone, Rey2:57
    13."Touring"Joey Ramone2:51

    2004 Captain Oi! CD bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    14."Spiderman"Bob Harris, Paul Francis Webster1:56

    Personnel

    Ramones

    • Joey Ramone – lead vocals (tracks 1–4, 6, 7, 9–14)
    • Johnny Ramone – guitar
    • Marky Ramone – drums
    • C.J. Ramone – bass guitar, lead vocals (tracks 5, 8)

    Additional musicians

    • Vernon Reid – guitar solo (track 11)
    • Joe McGinty – keyboards (track 7)
    • Flo & Eddie – backing vocals (tracks 3, 13)
    • Daniel Rey – additional guitar (uncredited)[22][23]
    • Andy Shernoff – additional guitar (uncredited)[22][23]
    • Ed Stasium – additional guitar (uncredited)[24]

    Technical

    • Ed Stasium – producer, mixing
    • Gary Kurfirst – executive producer
    • Paul Hamingson – engineer, mixing assistant
    • Greg Calbi – mastering
    • Joe Warda – assistant engineer (The Magic Shop)
    • Bryce Goggin – assistant engineer (Baby Monster)
    • Garris Shipon – assistant engineer (Baby Monster)
    • UE Nastasi – assistant mixing engineer (East Hill)
    • George DuBose – art direction, photography, design

    Charts

    Album

    Chart (1992)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (ARIA)[25]

    93

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[26]

    11

    Japanese Albums (Oricon)[27]

    69

    Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[28]

    41

    US Billboard 200[29]

    190

    Singles

    Year

    Single

    Chart

    Position

    1992

    "Poison Heart"

    Modern Rock Tracks

    6[20]

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Argentina (CAPIF)[30]

    Gold

    30,000^

    Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[31]

    Gold

    100,000*

    * Sales figures based on certification alone.
    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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