Beat Hotel | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1985 | |||
Genre | Pop rock, power pop | |||
Label | RCA Victor | |||
Producer | John Jansen | |||
The Bongos chronology | ||||
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Beat Hotel is an album by the American band the Bongos, released in 1985. [1] [2] Its title is an homage to the Beat Hotel, in Paris, where many Beat writers lived in the 1950s. [3] The first single was "Space Jungle". [4] The album peaked at No. 209 on the Billboard 200. [5] The band supported Beat Hotel with a North American tour. [6]
Produced by John Jansen, the recording sessions for the album took four months, with the Bongos using four different studios. [7] [8] [9] The band's frontman Richard Barone and guitarist James Mastro spent much of 1984 in Mexico, which influenced their decision to use Latin percussion on some of the tracks. [8] The Bongos were also inspired by the Beatles' Revolver and tried to write and record the songs in different ways. [10] Barone used the cut-up technique for some of the songs' lyrics. [11] He played a guitar synthesizer on several tracks; he borrowed the instrument from Kool & the Gang, who were recording in the same studio. [8] Kate Pierson sang on "Apache Dancing". [12]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Calgary Herald | F [14] |
Duluth News Tribune | 3/10 [15] |
The Great Indie Discography | 4/10 [16] |
MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Philadelphia Daily News said, "In going for a more complete pop-rock sound, the Bongos have sacrificed a bit of their off-the-wall charm, so that some cuts here... sound like they were tailored to fit in on 'contemporary hits' format radio stations." [18] The San Diego Union stated that "the bouncy guitar playing of James Mastro and Richard Barone and the ecstatic, always melodic vocals ... recalled innumerable now-forgotten power pop groups from the late '70s." [19] The Courier-News called the album "important party music." [20] The Boston Globe said that "there's nothing worth the pop pantheon." [21]
The Tampa Tribune praised Barone's "perfect-pop tenor". [7] The New York Daily News noted that the band "can be a little camp and corny, recalling the Dave Clark Five." [22] The Calgary Herald opined that "everything is so painfully shallow this time around", concluding that "there isn't one hook, one lyrical gem that stays with the listener after a song has limped by." [14] Trouser Press labeled Beat Hotel "the Bongos' most rocking record, a sparkling explosion of guitar pop." [23] The Duluth News Tribune stated, "The Bongos are an object lesson in what can happen when an artificial movement like 'power pop' or 'new wave' dies out." [15]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Space Jungle" | |
2. | "Apache Dancing" | |
3. | "Brave New World" | |
4. | "A Story (Written in the Sky)" | |
5. | "The Beat Hotel" | |
6. | "Come Back to Me" | |
7. | "Splinters" | |
8. | "She Starts Shaking" | |
9. | "Totem Pole" | |
10. | "Blow Up" |