| Brand New Year | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | ||||
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1999 | |||
| Genre | Rock | |||
| Label | Doolittle/Mercury | |||
| Producer | Eric "Roscoe" Ambel | |||
| The Bottle Rockets chronology | ||||
| ||||
Brand New Year is an album by the American band the Bottle Rockets, released in 1999. [1] [2] The first single was "Nancy Sinatra". [3] The band supported the album with a North American tour. [4]
After leaving Atlantic Records, the Bottle Rockets decided to focus on recording a rock album, concluding that their recent rock songs were stronger than their country ones. [5] Brand New Year was produced by Eric "Roscoe" Ambel. [6] Many its songs were inspired by people and stories from the band's hometown of Festus, Missouri. [7] Bass player Robert Kearns joined the band prior to the recording sessions. [5] The band and Ambel listened to Shania Twain's Come On Over during the sessions and decorated the studio with Twain posters and artwork; frontman Brian Henneman thought that the band was the loosest it had been in a studio. [8] [9] The title track appears in two versions, one electric and one acoustic; Henneman half-jokingly likened it to a "Hey Hey, My My" effort, saying that it was an attempt to give thematic weight to the album. [10] "Gotta Get Up" is about the unchanging daily grind of work. [11] "Headed for the Ditch" alludes to Neil Young's Decade liner notes. [12] "White Boy Blues" is about old guitars that are so expensive that only very wealthy consumers can afford them. [13]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Chicago Sun-Times | |
| Robert Christgau | |
| Lincoln Journal Star | |
| (The New) Rolling Stone Record Guide | |
| Spin | 6/10 [19] |
| The Virgin Encyclopedia of Nineties Music | |
The Chicago Tribune called the Bottle Rockets "the thinking person's hillbilly bar band". [21] The Village Voice said that the band uses "foursquare riffs and dual-lead lines to kick up some boogie dust in their wake-kinda like Georgia Satellites, but with real grime under their fingernails." [22] Stereo Review concluded, "When a roots-rock band's songs start wearing hangdog expressions, the sense of unbridled fun that is the genre's calling card is lost." [23] Spin noted that "it's easy to mistake the Bottle Rockets for a musical goof." [19]
The Independent said that "one of America's very best bar bands return with a darker, denser and generally louder disc, with their biting humour intact." [24] Robert Christgau praised "Headed for the Ditch" and "Gotta Get Up". [16] The Lincoln Journal Star called the Bottle Rockets "America's last great rock 'n' roll band." [17] The Chicago Sun-Times labeled the album the band's "grungiest set of bar rock yet". [15] The Santa Fe New Mexican included Brand New Year on its list of the 20 best albums of 1999. [25]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Nancy Sinatra" | |
| 2. | "Alone in Bad Company" | |
| 3. | "I've Been Dying" | |
| 4. | "Sometimes Found" | |
| 5. | "Headed for the Ditch" | |
| 6. | "Helpless" | |
| 7. | "Let Me Know" | |
| 8. | "Brand New Year" | |
| 9. | "Dead Dog Memories" | |
| 10. | "The Bar's on Fire" | |
| 11. | "White Boy Blues" | |
| 12. | "Gotta Get Up" | |
| 13. | "Love Like a Truck" | |
| 14. | "Another Brand New Year" |