Music for Cougars | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | July 21, 2009 | |||
Recorded | September 2008–March 2009 | |||
Studio | Pulse Recording Studios (Silver Lake, California) | |||
Genre | Pop rock [1] [2] | |||
Length | 42:04 | |||
Label | Pulse Recordings | |||
Producer | Josh Abraham, Steve Fox, Stan Frazier, Tim Pagnotta, S*A*M and Sluggo, Luke Walker | |||
Sugar Ray chronology | ||||
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Music for Cougars is Sugar Ray's sixth studio album, released in 2009. This was the last album to feature turntablist Craig "DJ Homicide" Bullock, bassist Murphy Karges and drummer Stan Frazier before their departures in August 2010 and early 2012, respectively.
In the six year gap between Music for Cougars and Sugar Ray's previous album In the Pursuit of Leisure , some of the band members started families, while singer Mark McGrath began focusing on roles in the media industry. This included a role as host of entertainment news program Extra , which he began in 2004. [3] During the break, the band continued to play a handful of shows a year, and when McGrath's role on Extra finished in 2008, it freed up time for the band to record another album. [3] On Extra, McGrath was replaced as host by former Saved by the Bell actor Mario Lopez. Music for Cougars was Sugar Ray's first album to not be released on a major label, as they departed Atlantic Records in 2006, following the release of a greatest hits compilation in 2005. [3] They would later return to a major label for 2019's Little Yachty , which was distributed via BMG. [4] [5]
Since they were no longer working with a major label on Music for Cougars, the band said they had less pressure on them than with previous albums. [3] Sugar Ray felt as though they needed help getting back into a "groove" with the album, after being largely inactive for the past few years, so they enlisted the help of outside writers, including Paul Weber of their new label Pulse. Guitarist Rodney Sheppard said that they "collaborated a lot" with Weber, and that he was "responsible for kicking the cobwebs off our songwriting abilities". [3] The band were pleased with the overall outcome of the music, with Sheppard saying in 2009 that he considers it to be his "second or third favorite" of their records. [3]
Music for Cougars includes a cover of an unreleased Weezer song called "Love is the Answer". Sugar Ray had shared occasional bills with Weezer beginning in the mid-1990s, and in 1997 they recorded a song called "Rivers", which was an ode to Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo, and written in the style of a Weezer song. It appeared on the soundtrack album of the horror film Scream 2 (1997), in addition to appearing in the credits of that film. Regarding "Love Is the Answer", Sheppard said in 2009 "it was so surreal for us; we've been huge fans of Weezer since the first record. On the Scream 2 soundtrack, we had a song that we named 'Rivers'. So years down the line, to actually have a contribution from him is so amazing for us." [3] A few months after Music for Cougars was released, Weezer decided to include their own version of "Love Is the Answer" on their seventh studio album Raditude . [6]
The track "She’s Got the (Woo-Hoo)" includes the lyric "She comes when she's ready/She's Sex and the City/She'll bring you to your knees", which lyrically parodies the television series Sex and the City . [7] When asked what the song's title meant, McGrath replied in 2009, "well, really you can't be so literal. If you make it so obvious there's no song. Whatever floats your boat. Whatever woo-hoo you need. I mean, it could be about your dog, you know?." [8]
The title references the largely female fanbase Sugar Ray started attracting following the release of their 1997 album Floored . [3] In 2009, McGrath told Rolling Stone that he became inspired to use this title after a friend of his brought up their crowd demographics at a show. The show was an outdoor performance at a mall, with McGrath remembering, "we were playing at the Grove [mall] here in Hollywood, a funny gig on a Sunday, people walking by with strollers. And a friend of ours goes, 'All your fans are cougars'. That’s fucking brilliant." McGrath added that, "to me 'cougars' is an empowering word. It’s like role reversal. Cougars are proud, they take care of themselves and they know what they want." [9] Regarding their audience, Rodney Sheppard said in 2009 "for the most part, we’ve always had a real variety, from skinheads with mohawks, to moms with their daughters. Granted, the majority is women in their 30s and 40s seeing us." [3] Sheppard also said that "we don’t want to exclude the guys who still come out, and some kids. We're curious to see how young of an audience we can attract now." [3]
The album was released during a period when interest in the term 'cougar' was increasing in the media, with the Courteney Cox sitcom Cougar Town premiering on ABC in September 2009, just two months after Music for Cougars was released. McGrath said in 2009 that the album title led to people considering him as a "guru" on cougar culture. He adds, "the irony of that is, I'm 41. I'm certainly not any cougar’s prize." [10]
The album was not as successful commercially as previous Sugar Ray albums. It reached number eighty on the Billboard 200 chart, with none of the album's three singles charting. Shortly before the album's release, McGrath told the New York Post that "there are no commercial concerns for Sugar Ray now. Sure we'd love to sell a million records, who wouldn't? But look, when a U2 record and a Guns N' Roses record both [recently] fail commercially, it’s far from us to think we can sell millions." [11]
Aggregate scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Metacritic | (54/100) [12] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Entertainment Weekly | B [13] |
L.A. Times | [14] |
Rolling Stone | [2] |
The Tune | (C+) [15] |
Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic awarded the album three-and-half out of five stars. He wrote "they make no bones about making Music for Cougars, those cougars being the very girls that shook their hips to 'Fly' back in 1997 and are looking for a little bit of the same breezy vibe 12 years later, a little bit of sexy nostalgia to get them through their summer, a soundtrack to a few girls' nights out." [1] Erlewine also noted the heavy usage of autotune on Music for Cougars, remarking that "like the titular aging sex kittens, Sugar Ray can sometimes try too hard to seem younger than their years, pushing the dance beats a little bit too hard, and Mark McGrath relies on some unseemly Auto-Tune, but even with this too-evident aural botox, the group remains a guilty pleasure that's a bit hard to resist." [1] Christian Hoard of Rolling Stone gave it two out of five stars in August 2009, commenting that "McGrath's taste for simple melody might someday help him pen a country hit or two." [2] Billboard claimed in 2009 that it "marks a return to the tried-and-true formula that made 1997's 'Fly' a radio staple." [16]
Entertainment Weekly's Leah Greenblatt gave it a B rating and also compared it their previous material, writing that they are "still churning out affable pop-rock for various beer-commercial activities (beach volleyball, slo-mo water-balloon fights)." [13] Brian McElhiney of The Daily Gazette said in August 2009 that the album title "seems appropriate, after all, the younger female audience the southern California group began cultivating with its 1997 breakout smash hit 'Fly' and other subsequent breezy summer anthems have all grown up along with the band." [3] However, he added that "from the sugar-coated pop that broke them, to the band’s early funk-metal freakouts — it’s hard for even the band's members to know just what audience will come out to the shows." [3]
Weezer is an American rock band formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1992. Since 2001, the band has consisted of Rivers Cuomo, Patrick Wilson, Brian Bell, and Scott Shriner. They have sold 10 million albums in the US and more than 35 million worldwide.
Rivers Cuomo is an American musician best known as the lead vocalist, guitarist, and songwriter of the rock band Weezer. Cuomo was born in New York City and raised in several Buddhist communities in the northeastern U.S. until the age of 10, when his family settled in Connecticut. He played in several bands in Connecticut and California before forming Weezer in 1992.
Sugar Ray is an American rock band formed in Newport Beach, California, in 1986. Originally playing heavier funk metal and nu metal style music, the band achieved mainstream popularity in 1997 with their more pop-influenced single "Fly". The song's success led the band to shift its style dramatically to the more radio-friendly pop sound with their subsequent releases. Their best-selling album, 14:59, was released in 1999, and featured popular singles "Every Morning", "Someday", followed by a self-titled album in 2001 featuring the single "When It's Over". The band would release two further albums, In the Pursuit of Leisure (2003) and Music for Cougars (2009), though the albums and respective singles generally sold far less. The band continued to tour into the 2010s.
14:59 is the third studio album by American rock band Sugar Ray, released on January 12, 1999. The album shows the band moving into a more mainstream pop rock sound, due to the success of their single "Fly" off their prior album Floored, and its title self-deprecatingly references the "15 minutes of fame" critics claimed the band was riding on. It entered the top 20 on the Billboard 200, peaking at number 17 and being certified triple-platinum by the RIAA.
Lemonade and Brownies is the debut studio album by the American rock band Sugar Ray, released on April 4, 1995, by Atlantic Records. It was far less successful than the band's later releases on Atlantic. The debut album and the band's next album Floored also featured less of a pop-influenced sound than their later work.
Mark Sayers McGrath is an American singer who is the lead vocalist of the rock band Sugar Ray. McGrath is also known for his work as a co-host of Extra, and he was the host of Don't Forget the Lyrics! in 2010. McGrath hosted the second season of the TV show Killer Karaoke, taking the place of Jackass star Steve-O.
Imperial Teen is a San Francisco–based indie pop group made up of Roddy Bottum, primarily on guitar/vocals; Will Schwartz, primarily on guitar/vocals; Lynn Truell, primarily on drums and backing vocals; and Jone Stebbins, primarily on bass and backing vocals. Imperial Teen became known for its boy–girl harmonies and for all four members switching off and on instruments during shows.
Patrick George Wilson is an American musician, singer and songwriter. He is best known as a co-founding member and the drummer of the rock band Weezer, with whom he has recorded 15 studio albums.
Floored is the second studio album by American rock band Sugar Ray, released on June 24, 1997. It includes the hit song "Fly", and another moderately successful single, "RPM". Two versions of "Fly" appear on the album, one of them featuring reggae artist Super Cat. Floored is the first album to feature DJ Homicide as an official member, and he remained with the band through to 2009's Music for Cougars. DJ Homicide had previously only been credited as a guest musician for a few of the songs on their debut album Lemonade and Brownies.
Sugar Ray is the fourth studio album by the band Sugar Ray. The album was released on June 12, 2001, and debuted at number 6 on the Billboard 200 chart, and went gold. The album's first single, "When It's Over", also performed well on pop and rock charts.
In the Pursuit of Leisure is the fifth studio album by American rock band Sugar Ray, released in 2003. Singer-songwriter Esthero and reggae singer Shaggy both make guest appearances.
"Do It Again" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys that was released as a standalone single on July 8, 1968. It was written by Brian Wilson and Mike Love as a self-conscious callback to the group's earlier surf image, which they had not embraced since 1964. Love and Wilson also share the lead vocal on the song.
Weezer is the sixth studio album by the American rock band Weezer, released on June 3, 2008, by DGC and Interscope Records. Rick Rubin and Jacknife Lee both produced parts of the album, with the band producing a handful of tracks themselves. It is the only Weezer album to feature lead vocals from all four band members. The album also features more musical experimentation in comparison to their previous efforts, especially shown in such songs as "Dreamin'", "The Angel and The One", and "The Greatest Man That Ever Lived".
"When It's Over" is a song by American rock band Sugar Ray. It was released to all radio formats on May 7, 2001, as the lead single from their self-titled fourth album (2001). The song reached number six in New Zealand, number 13 on the US Billboard Hot 100, and number 32 on the UK Singles Chart.
Alone II: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo is a compilation album by the Weezer songwriter Rivers Cuomo. It is Cuomo's second compilation of demos, after Alone: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo, and includes material written for Weezer's unfinished album Songs From the Black Hole. Alone II debuted at #2 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart with first-week sales of 6,000. It was followed by Alone III: The Pinkerton Years (2011).
Raditude is the seventh studio album by American rock band Weezer, released on October 30, 2009 and is their final album on DGC Records, Geffen Records and Interscope Records. The title of the album was suggested to Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo by actor Rainn Wilson. The album's first single, "(If You're Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To", was released in August 2009. The album debuted at number seven on the Billboard 200. The album's cover artwork is a photo of a dog named Sidney, originally published in the August 2009 issue of National Geographic.
"(If You're Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To" is a song by American alternative rock/power pop band Weezer. It was released as the first single from the band's seventh studio album Raditude. Initially scheduled to be released to American rock radio on August 25, 2009, the official release of the single to radio was moved up to August 18. The single debuted at number 21 on the Billboard Rock Songs Chart, and in the same position on the Alternative Songs chart. The music video features Odette Yustman. The song was first played live on August 23, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario at the Molson Amphitheatre. The main riff of this song bears a similarity to the main riff of The Jam song "Town Called Malice".
Hurley is the eighth studio album by American rock band Weezer, released on September 10, 2010. It is Weezer's only album released by Epitaph Records. The album was produced by Rivers Cuomo and Shawn Everett, and, similar to their previous album Raditude, features songs co-written with songwriters outside of the band.
Everything Will Be Alright in the End is the ninth studio album by American rock band Weezer, released on October 7, 2014. It is Weezer's only album released by Republic Records, and the third and final Weezer album produced by Ric Ocasek, who previously produced the Blue Album (1994) and Green Album (2001).
Little Yachty is the seventh studio album by American musical group Sugar Ray, released in 2019 through BMG. Singer Mark McGrath and guitarist Rodney Sheppard are the only members of the band to have appeared on their previous album, 2009's Music for Cougars.
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