Bad Vibes (Lloyd Cole album)

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Bad Vibes
Bad Vibes (Lloyd Cole album).jpg
Studio album by
Released11 October 1993
Recorded1992-93
LabelFontana
ProducerAdam Peters
Lloyd Cole chronology
Don't Get Weird on Me Babe
(1991)
Bad Vibes
(1993)
Love Story
(1995)

Bad Vibes is the 3rd studio album of Lloyd Cole. It was released in October 1993 on Fontana and reached number 38 on the UK Albums chart and number 8 on the Swedish chart.[1][2][3]

Track listing[]

  1. "Morning Is Broken"
  2. "So You'd Like to Save the World"
  3. "Holier Than Thou"
  4. "Love You So What"
  5. "Wild Mushrooms"
  6. "My Way to You"
  7. "Too Much of a Good Thing"
  8. "Fall Together"
  9. "Mister Wrong"
  10. "Seen the Future"
  11. "Can't Get Arrested"
  12. "For the Pleasure of Your Company
  13. "4 M.B."

Personnel[]

References[]

  1. ^ Peter Buckley The Rough Guide to Rock 2003 p.1771 "The end result, LLOYD COLE (1990), met with mixed reviews and poor sales. Follow-ups DON'T GET WEIRD ON ME, BABE (1991) and BAD VIBES (1993) were greeted with similar indifference. Indeed, it was not until his fourth album, LOVE (1995), that Cole was to receive anything approaching a positive critical response (the single "Like Lovers Do" was as charming as anything released that year). Looking back at these albums, you can see that Cole was really rather hard done by, as the first two solo sets in particular had things going for them."
  2. ^ Stereo Review - Volume 59 1994 -- Page 500 LLOYD COLE Bad Vibes RYKO 10306 (56 min) Performance: Dour Recording: Very good Lloyd Cole remains one of the sharpest songwriters around, but this album documents a curdled sensibility from its title on down. Mostly, Cole sounds like he's slipping under the volcano (to borrow the title of Malcolm Lowery's novel about a day in the life of an alcoholic), and "Bad Vibes" abounds in references to excessive consumption. Just look at the cover photo..."
  3. ^ Billboard - 12 Aug 1995 - Page 10 "Ryko picked up "Bad Vibes" for U.S. distribution after the album had already been released in the UK and had been available in the U.S. on import. Ryko was both surprised and encouraged by the fact that Cole's fan base in the industry does not seem to have been eroded by the two-year wait for "Love Stories" and by his four-year absence from the stage. .."



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