| Cerulean | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1991 | |||
| Genre | Alternative rock, pop [1] | |||
| Label | Sire | |||
| Producer | Pat McCarthy, David Schelzel, Rob Minnig | |||
| The Ocean Blue chronology | ||||
| ||||
Cerulean is the second album by the American band the Ocean Blue, released in 1991. [2] [3] They supported it by opening for the Psychedelic Furs on a North American tour. [4] "Ballerina Out of Control" peaked at No. 3 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart. [5]
The album was produced by Pat McCarthy and bandmembers David Schelzel and Rob Minnig. [6] The Ocean Blue were more interested in producing an album that sounded of a piece rather than worrying about how well singles would do. [7] The majority of the keyboard parts were played by Minnig. [8] "The Planetarium Scene" alludes to a passage from the Book of Psalms. [9] "Falling Through the Ice" is an instrumental. [10]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| The Daily Illini | |
| The Macon Telegraph | |
| The Philadelphia Inquirer | |
| St. Petersburg Times | |
| Syracuse Herald-Journal | |
| York Daily Record | |
The St. Petersburg Times opined, "Although it may be a botched attempt at moving in a more acoustic direction, Cerulean is a complete disaster, and unravels all the promise that the Ocean Blue originally showed." [14] The Washington Post noted that "the quartet's cocktail-lounge rhythms and its interest in colors, flowers and mutability ... suggest a strong kinship with its trans-Atlantic peers... Like the products of most of those bands, Cerulean is pleasant but a bit too wispy for its own good." [17] Dave Eggers, in The Daily Illini , said that the lyrics "are delicate, poetic and small-scaled." [11] The York Daily Record concluded that, "as with a lot of alternative bands these days ... the Ocean Blue [have] tapped the sound of alternative rock without tapping any of the depth or sense of experimentation that made this music just that—an alternative." [16] The Morning Call listed Cerulean as one of the worst albums of 1991. [18]
In 1999, the Portland Press Herald included the album on its list of the 90 "best CDs of the '90s that no one heard". [19] In 2024, the Star Tribune noted that the music "fell in with the more mopey, lusher, prettier brand of pre-Nirvana alternative rock led by groups like the Cure, New Order, the Church and fellow Sire label mates Echo & the Bunnymen." [20]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Breezing Up" | |
| 2. | "Cerulean" | |
| 3. | "Marigold" | |
| 4. | "A Separate Reality" | |
| 5. | "Mercury" | |
| 6. | "Questions of Travel" | |
| 7. | "When Life Was Easy" | |
| 8. | "The Planetarium Scene" | |
| 9. | "Falling Through the Ice" | |
| 10. | "Ballerina Out of Control" | |
| 11. | "Hurricane Amore" | |
| 12. | "I've Sung One Too Many Songs for a Crowd That Didn't Want to Hear" |