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Modern Lovers 88

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Modern Lovers 88
Color photograph of a man holding a saxophone outside a neon-lit motel at sunset
Cover photograph by Andy Paley
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 1987 (1987-11)
RecordedThree days in autumn 1987
StudioThe Bennett House, Grass Valley, California
Genre
Length29:35
LabelRounder Records
ProducerBrennan Totten
Jonathan Richman chronology
It's Time for Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers
(1986)
Modern Lovers 88
(1987)
Jonathan Richman
(1989)
Singles from Modern Lovers 88
  1. "California Desert Party" / "When Harpo Played His Harp"
    Released: 1988

Modern Lovers 88[a] is a studio album by American singer-songwriter Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers. Recorded and released in late 1987, it became Richman's final recording alongside a backing band credited as the Modern Lovers. After a period of frequent switches from one record company to another, he released Modern Lovers 88 through Rounder Records, where he remained until the mid-1990s.

Running just under half an hour, the album features a new lineup of the Modern Lovers as a trio, with Richman joined by guitarist Brennan Totten and drummer Johnny Avila. Totten also produced the album, his first of several such projects with Richman. The three musicians had toured live together for about a year before recording the album at a studio near Richman's home in Grass Valley, California. With its acoustic instrumentation and spare arrangements, the sound of Modern Lovers 88 reflects Richman's love of early 1960s rock and roll and extreme aversion to loud amplification.

Early reviews were generally positive, but its reputation among rock critics soon stagnated. Record guides often dismissed it as unremarkable, along with most of the rest of Richman's 1980s output. Nonetheless, the album has garnered a cult following and reappraisal from critics who view it as an overlooked highlight of Richman's discography. Win Butler of Arcade Fire called it "a real classic that I never heard of as a classic."[2] For Record Store Day 2022, Craft Recordings reissued the album in a remastered 35th-anniversary edition. Richman scored a late-career debut on the Billboard charts when the reissue pushed Modern Lovers 88 to number 77 on Top Album Sales.

Background

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Photograph of a man playing a guitar onstage
Richman and the Modern Lovers, 1984. Modern Lovers 88 was Richman's final album featuring a backing band before going strictly solo.

Modern Lovers 88 was Richman's final album featuring a backing band credited as "the Modern Lovers", but he had already been touring as a solo artist since 1978.[3] After his 1986 album It's Time for Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers, he broke up the third lineup of the Modern Lovers. From that point onward, he preferred to work with a rotating cast of musicians on a more casual, fluid basis, rather than putting together a full backing band as a unit with a stable lineup.[4]

In 1986, Richman began performing live shows accompanied by his recent acquaintance Brennan Totten. A few months after discovering Totten playing in a Northern California blues band, Richman walked into Totten's home one morning, unannounced, singing his song "The UFO Man". When he got to the chorus, Richman exclaimed, "Your turn! You sing!", and Totten—who had been busy feeding his daughter at the time of the interruption—sang along in response, as requested. Richman replied, "Oh, you can sing too," and exited the residence. He asked Totten to join the Modern Lovers a few days later.[5] While touring throughout the United States and Europe in 1986–87, Richman and Totten were joined on a temporary basis by Richman's old friend and frequent collaborator Andy Paley.[6]

By this time in his career, music journalists noted Richman had developed a tendency to switch to a new label on virtually every new album he made.[7] His previous three albums had been distributed in the United States by as many different labels: Sire Records for Jonathan Sings! (1983), Twin/Tone for Rockin' and Romance (1985), and Upside for It's Time for Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers (1986).[8] All three labels were associated with new wave music, and all three in turn had marketed Richman as "a nerdy new waver"—each time to little success.[9] For Modern Lovers 88, he would switch labels once again—this time joining Rounder Records, a smaller American label with a niche specialization in folk music.[10] In the United Kingdom, his last two albums had been distributed by Rough Trade.[11] While he enjoyed the creative freedom Rough Trade had afforded him under the enthusiastic personal support of label head Geoff Travis, the company's financial doldrums meant they had done little to promote his music. He ended his relationship with Rough Trade before recording Modern Lovers 88.[12]

Recording and release

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Modern Lovers 88 was recorded in the autumn of 1987 in Grass Valley, California, near where Richman lived at the time.[13] The sessions lasted three days.[14] Totten produced the album.[b] Having practiced extensively on the road, the band took little time for rehearsal before the sessions.[13] Their performances were captured live in the studio, and no overdubbing was done.[16]

Though its release is often dated to 1988,[c] Rounder Records issued the album in November 1987.[22] Departing from his previous labels' tendency to lump his records in the "new wave" category, Rounder promoted him as "a quirky folkie", a persona more in line with his musical direction.[9] To promote the album, Rounder issued "California Desert Party" (backed with "When Harpo Played His Harp") as a 7-inch single in Spain[26] and released "Dancin' Late at Night" as a track on The Rounder CD Single, a mini-compilation also featuring recent songs by NRBQ, Têtes Noires, and Barrence Whitfield & the Savages.[27] He would release another seven albums with Rounder before switching to Vapor Records for his 1996 album Surrender to Jonathan.[28] The album was released on Demon Records in the UK[24] and Stony Plain Records in Canada.[29]

Despite being recorded and released in 1987, the album was titled Modern Lovers 88.[30] When asked about the apparent chronological discrepancy, Richman commented: "We figured that would give it a longer shelf life."[31] "If Richman were capable of irony," a critic wrote in Rolling Stone, "the album's title might seem tongue in cheek: the simple chord changes, bare-bones instrumentation and unsophisticated production are as un-up-to-date as any of Richman's works since 1976's hard-edged Modern Lovers."[32] The title may have been intended as an allusion to the song "Rocket 88" (1951), one of the very earliest rock and roll records in history.[33]

2022 reissue

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Chart (2022) Peak
position
US Top Album Sales[34] 77

By 2007, Modern Lovers 88 and most of Richman's other 1980s albums had been out of print for many years.[35] On April 23, 2022, the label Craft Recordings reissued the album in a 35th-anniversary edition for Record Store Day.[36] It was the latest in a series of reissues from Richman's Rounder Records back catalog.[37] Pressed on sky-blue vinyl in an edition of 7,000 copies, the record was remastered by Kevin Gray using an all-analog process.[38] The re-release sent Modern Lovers 88 to number 77 on Top Album Sales for the week of May 7, 2022, marking Richman's first-ever appearance on any Billboard chart.[34]

Reception

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Professional ratings
Contemporaneous reviews (1987–88)
Review scores
SourceRating
Billboard"Recommended"[39]
Hi-Fi News & Record ReviewB[40]
NME9/10[41]
Oakland Tribune[42]
Record-JournalA[43]
Record Mirror[44]
Rolling Stone[32]

Reviews in the American press were generally favorable, though some expressed reservations. For Rolling Stone, David Handelman summed up Richman's preceding mid-1980s output as "spotty, but always with shining moments"; he expressed a similarly mixed reaction to Modern Lovers 88, finding some tracks "honest and winning" while others "wear thin fast".[32] Creem reviewer Craig Zeller wrote that "a lot of these songs do coast on minor melodies and self-borrowings a little too often but—as usual—Jonathan's engaging manner pulls you in."[45] In the Boston Globe, David Emerson likened Richman to "a sincere/silly cross between Wally Cleaver and Pee Wee Herman ... In Richman's world, familiar joys are to be praised and new ones explored. An artist in the process of maturing? Not really. A singer with heart who's not ashamed to still have fun? You bet."[46]

Other American critics were less reserved with their praise. "Happily," wrote Spin's Jim Daly, "Modern Lovers 88 finds Richman firmly back on track. The 11-song album can be compared to a picture drawn by a first-grader, which is then proudly brought home, and admired not for its technical acumen but for its purity of spirit."[47] David Okamoto of the St. Petersburg Times compared it to "a sloppy finger-painting, where technique comes in second to the feelings being expressed", and said an open-minded listener would "discover that Modern Lovers 88 is just a warm, fun throwback to a simpler time, when music was nothing but a form of personal expression."[9] Jim Zebora of the Record-Journal said the album showed Richman to be "one of rock's wonders" and highlighted the immediacy of his vocal performance, writing that "he's got guts to be so far out in front, unprotected by anything but his sincerity."[43] In the Austin American-Statesman, James Nold Jr. praised Modern Lovers 88 for encapsulating what he saw as Richman's finest qualities as a performer and songwriter, which he felt overcame flaws like a lack of ambition or propensity for childishness:

Sometimes, Richman has sounded too self-consciously cute; worse, he's sometimes appeared to be forcing his magic. I suspect Richman knows this, but disregards it. ... And while I wish he were challenging himself more (cover "Gimme Shelter"!), he's right. As time goes on, it's depressing how few songs seem to come out of the spirit that inspired "Eight Days a Week" or "Do You Believe in Magic". By and large, rock isn't convincing as happy music anymore. For all its shortcomings, Richman's music is.

... If you've never heard Richman before, [Modern Lovers 88] gives you a good sense of what he's about, his joyous spirit, his bad jokes, his willingness to be goofy on behalf of the things he believes. ... "If someone else could do it / How could nobody does?" Richman asks [on "When Harpo Played His Harp"]. Same goes for you, Jonathan.[48]

Critical consensus among reviewers in the British press was also complimentary. Writing for Record Mirror, Ian Dickson said Richman "still hasn't grown up and, having grooved along to Modern Lovers 88, I hope he never will", while also claiming the songs to be "a lot more astute than you might imagine" in light of their sometimes juvenile subject matter.[44] NME's Len Brown detected "an original spring in his steps, a daft charm in his innocence" that he compared favorably to the late 1970s Modern Lovers lineup, and wrote, "There's something reassuring about Jonathan's prolonged adolescence, something we can all depend on; if he ever grew up it would be as disturbing as Morrissey taking up wind-surfing. For while the world gets older and uglier Jo-Jo gets simpler 'n' sweeter, younger all the time."[41] Pete Clark at Hi-Fi News & Record Review wrote that "88 sees Richman further refining his muse, casting aside some of his more icky anthropomorphisms and descending still further into deep joy ... If there's a child in you waiting to get out, here's the 24-hour pass."[44] A print advertisement for the album, run by Demon Records, quoted further plaudits published in City Limits and Melody Maker.[49]

Retrospective appraisal

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Retrospective professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[19]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[3]
MusicHound Rock2.5/5[50]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1992)[51]  (2004)[20]
Spin Alternative Record Guide5/10[18]

In record guides of 1990s and 2000s, rock critics often dismissed Modern Lovers 88 as just another album in a mid-career slump for Richman. The album received middling scores in The Rolling Stone Album Guide,[52] the Spin Alternative Record Guide,[18] and MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide.[50] Critics usually lumped it alongside his other 1980s records, which were glossed as lackluster, dated in style, or too eccentric for the uninitiated listener. None of the aforementioned guides differentiated the album from any of his other 1980s records,[53] with the exception of the third edition of the Rolling Stone Album Guide, which dubiously noted the album's reputation as a comeback among Richman's cult following.[54] Prolific rock critic Robert Christgau omitted the album altogether from his Record Guide: The '80s.[8]

By contrast, AllMusic's Richie Unterberger deemed the album "one of his better '80s efforts," praising its stripped-down "summertime campfire feel" and singling out "I Love Hot Nights", "California Desert Party", and "Gail Loves Me" among the "best uptempo tunes" in Richman's catalog.[19] In the New Trouser Press Record Guide, Ira Robbins praised it as a "magical" and "all-too-brief set" with songs that "convert the essential ingredients of '50s R&B into airy but exciting dance-rock as only the Modern Lovers can."[55] Modern Lovers 88 received a highly favorable reassessment in the anthology Lost in the Grooves: Scram's Capricious Guide to the Music You Missed by critic Jacqueline Zahas, who said the album had become "stranded in his long catalog" but "reminds us that Jonathan's not just sweetness and whimsy, but a visionary, stubbornly working out his own unique brand of rock and roll."[56] The editors of the Scram anthology went further, calling for a broad reappraisal of Richman's solo efforts from the period:

Deep catalogs that resist easy summary create their own problems. The book on Jonathan Richman says: proto-punk innovator with the Modern Lovers and faux-naïf kiddie songster thereafter. But that book's wrong. The kid songs were only a brief transitional period to stake out a new sound and songwriting territory that had a huge influence on the nineties indie lo-fi scene. We review Modern Lovers 88 in this book, but could have just as easily highlighted Rock 'n' Roll with the Modern Lovers or Rockin' and Romance or I, Jonathan, each stellar, distinct, and scattered across his career.[57]

British music critic Alexis Petridis later referred to Modern Lovers 88 as one of the records from Richman's "80s purple patch".[35] In 2018, NME included the album on a list of "100 cult albums to hear before you die" with a blurb written by Win Butler of Arcade Fire, who praised Richman's lyricism on songs such as "I Love Hot Nights".[2]

Track listing

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All tracks are written by Jonathan Richman, except for track 11

Side A
No.TitleLength
1."Dancin' Late at Night"3:27
2."When Harpo Played His Harp"2:33
3."Gail Loves Me"2:45
4."New Kind of Neighborhood"2:41
5."African Lady"2:32
Side B
No.TitleMusicLength
6."I Love Hot Nights" 2:57
7."California Desert Party" 2:08
8."Everything's Gotta Be Right" 2:47
9."Circle I" 2:33
10."I Have Come Out to Play" 3:45
11."The Theme from Moulin Rouge"Georges Auric1:27
Total length:29:35

Personnel

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Adapted from the original CD packaging,[1] except where otherwise noted.

Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers
  • Jonathan Richman – lead vocals, guitar, saxophone
  • Brennan Totten – backing vocals, guitar, production[b]
  • Johnny Avila – backing vocals, "drum"[d]
Others
  • Paul Emery – engineer
  • Andy Paley – color photography
  • Barbara McHugh – black-and-white photography
  • Joanna Bodenweber – design
2022 reissue

Notes

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  1. ^ The album title is sometimes rendered with an apostrophe, as Modern Lovers '88. An apostrophe is not used in the title on the album packaging.[1]
  2. ^ a b Although no one received credit for the album's production in its liner notes, several sources identify Totten as its producer, including Richman's autobiographical essay "Jonathan Richman's First Twenty Years in Show Business"[15] and the biography There's Something About Jonathan: Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers[16]identify Totten as its producer.
  3. ^ Discographical reference materials differ as to the album's release year—for example, Trouser Press[17] and the Spin Alternative Record Guide[18] give 1987, while AllMusic[19] and The New Rolling Stone Album Guide[20] give 1988. The copyright notice on the original CD packaging indicates it was first published in 1987.[21] In a review published on November 19, 1987, a critic for The GW Hatchet noted its release was expected "this month", within "about two more weeks".[14] Rounder Records dated the album's release to November 1987 in the liner notes for the label's four-disc compilation, The Rounder Records Story (2010).[22] Other sources, however, suggest a release in early 1988: the album was first listed in the Schwann Catalog in February 1988,[23] and Martin C. Strong's The Essential Rock Discography provides the same month of release;[24] meanwhile, a notice in Billboard announced the album's release on LP and cassette (though not CD) for the week ending March 12, 1988.[25]
  4. ^ Specifically, Avila's singular "drum" was a tom.

References

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  1. ^ a b Richman & the Modern Lovers 1987.
  2. ^ a b NME staff 2018.
  3. ^ a b Larkin 1998, p. 3727.
  4. ^ Mitchell 1999, p. 143.
  5. ^ Mitchell 1999, p. 149.
  6. ^ Mitchell 1999, pp. 149, 152.
  7. ^ Harrison 1988, p. 81; Zeller 1988, p. 30.
  8. ^ a b Christgau 1990, pp. 346–347.
  9. ^ a b c Okamoto 1988, p. 2F.
  10. ^ Tobler 1991, p. 264.
  11. ^ Mitchell 1999, p. 147.
  12. ^ Mitchell 1999, pp. 152–153.
  13. ^ a b Mitchell 1999, p. 155.
  14. ^ a b Andler 1987, p. A15.
  15. ^ Richman 1989.
  16. ^ a b Mitchell 1999, pp. 155–156.
  17. ^ Robbins 1989, p. 478.
  18. ^ a b c Sheffield 1995, p. 257.
  19. ^ a b c Unterberger n.d.
  20. ^ a b Hochman 2004, p. 690.
  21. ^ Richman & the Modern Lovers 1987, back cover ("©℗ 1987 Rounder Records ...")
  22. ^ a b Himes 2010, p. 42.
  23. ^ Blackham, Crapo & Hart 1988, p. C489.
  24. ^ a b Strong 2006, p. 919.
  25. ^ Billboard staff 1988, p. 51.
  26. ^ SpanishCharts.com n.d.
  27. ^ Blackham, Crapo & Hart 1988, p. 7.
  28. ^ Bessman 1996, p. 10.
  29. ^ Harrison 1988, p. 81.
  30. ^ Mitchell 1999, p. 153; Gorin 2017.
  31. ^ Hasan 1992, p. 15.
  32. ^ a b c Handelman 1988, pp. 92–93.
  33. ^ Gorin 2017.
  34. ^ a b Billboard staff n.d.
  35. ^ a b Petridis 2007.
  36. ^ Hart 2022, pp. 24–25.
  37. ^ Ham 2022.
  38. ^ a b White 2022.
  39. ^ Rosenbluth 1988, p. 68.
  40. ^ Clark 1988, p. 113.
  41. ^ a b Brown 1988, p. 83.
  42. ^ Kelp 1988, p. 8.
  43. ^ a b Zebora 1988, p. E-2.
  44. ^ a b c Dickson 1988, p. 14.
  45. ^ Zeller 1988, p. 30.
  46. ^ Emerson 1988, p. 6.
  47. ^ Daly 1988, p. 23.
  48. ^ Nold 1988.
  49. ^ Demon Records 1988, p. 6 ("'His finest moment in years." City Limits Magazine / 'Purely evocative, absolutely precise. Classic.' Melody Maker")
  50. ^ a b Okamoto 1999, p. 942.
  51. ^ Coleman 1992, p. 589.
  52. ^ Coleman 1992, p. 589; Hochman 2004, p. 690.
  53. ^ Sheffield 1995, pp. 257–258; Larkin 1998, pp. 3726–3727; Okamoto 1999, pp. 941–942; Hochman 2004, pp. 690–691.
  54. ^ Coleman 1992, p. 590 ("Richman returns to more-or-less adult fare on his '80s albums, though he unfortunately retains that cloying, quavering, terminally self-conscious delivery. His cult followers identify Jonathan Sings! and Modern Lovers 88 as confident returns-to-form, however.")
  55. ^ Robbins 1989, p. 479.
  56. ^ Cooper & Smay 2005, p. 200.
  57. ^ Cooper & Smay 2005, p. 5.

Sources

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