Til Tuesday - Welcome Home
CD
Performer
 
Title
 
Welcome Home
UPC
 
07464403142
Genre
 
Rock/Pop
Released
 
1986-11-04
Our Price $12.99
Media Mail (allow 2-4 weeks); First Class (allow 1-3 weeks)
Notes / Reviews
This 1986 release is just the thing to put on the stereo after a hard day at the grind -- the lyrics are sweet, soothing, wistful, literate and sensitive, to use just a few appropriate adjectives! Bassist and songwriter Aimee Mann also happens to have one of the most gorgeous voices this reviewer has ever heard -- trust me, and give this a try... Includes Coming Up Close, Lovers' Day, Angels Never Call, and No One is Watching You Now. Oh yeah, most enthusiastically recommended!

:For other uses of "Welcome Home", see Welcome Home (disambiguation).

Welcome Home is the second studio album by the American band 'Til Tuesday, released in 1986. (see 1986 in music). It peaked at #49 on the Billboard albums chart.

Personnel

*Aimee Mann – vocals and bass

*Joey Pesce – piano, synthesizers and background vocals

*Robert Holmes – guitars and background vocals

*Michael Hausman – drums and percussion

Charts

Album – Billboard (North America)

Singles – Billboard (North America)

Category:'Til Tuesday albums

Category:1986 albums

Category:Albums produced by Rhett Davies

Category:Epic Records albums





This text has been derived from Welcome Home ('Til Tuesday album) on Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0

Artist/Band Information

Til Tuesday (often written as ’til tuesday) was an American New Wave band formed in Boston in 1982. Its original lineup was bassist/vocalist Aimee Mann, guitarist/vocalist Robert Holmes, keyboardist Joey Pesce, and drummer Michael Hausman.

History

'Til Tuesday first gained fame six months after its formation when it won Boston's WBCN Rock & Roll Rumble in 1983. Their original composition "Love in a Vacuum" (credited to all members of the group) received a fair amount of airplay on the station, and the group was eventually signed to Epic Records.

"Love in a Vacuum" was re-recorded for the Epic debut album, 1985's Voices Carry; however, the breakthrough song turned out to be the title track. The "Voices Carry" single peaked at number eight on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, and is said to have been inspired by an argument between Mann and Hausman, who had broken off a relationship before the album's release. According to producer Mike Thorne in his Stereo Society web site, "the title track was originally written and sung by Aimee as if to a woman.... The record company was predictably unhappy with such (quasi-lesbian) lyrics." Rolling Stone magazine would later report that Epic Records labelmate Cyndi Lauper was interested in recording "Voices Carry" with the original lyric, but only if the band didn't put it on their own release. The band declined.

The band became an early MTV staple with the "Voices Carry" video, which depicts an oppressive boyfriend trying to convert Mann to his upper-class lifestyle; she finally lashes out at him during a concert at Carnegie Hall, standing up from her seat in the audience and belting the lyrics, "He said, shut up! He said, shut up! Oh God, can't you keep it down...?" as she removes her cap to reveal her signature spiky, rat-tailed hair. As a result, the group won that year's MTV Video Music Award for Best New Artist.

By the 1986 follow-up Welcome Home, Mann was beginning to write more of the songs herself and the band was moving away from the slick new wave sound of their debut. But while critical reaction was generally strong, the number 26 placing for the lead single "What About Love" was a commercial disappointment, especially after the top-ten success of "Voices Carry". Even more problematic, the album just barely sneaked into the U.S. top 50, also a letdown after the number 19 placing for their first LP.

After the album's release Pesce left the band and was replaced by Michael Montes. Guitarists Jon Brion and Clayton Scoble also joined the group, although not as permanent members.

At about the same time, Mann's two-year relationship with singer-songwriter Jules Shear, whom she had been dating since the release of the Voices Carry album, came to an end. This breakup somewhat informed the band's final album, 1988's Everything's Different Now, particularly in the song "J for Jules", though Mann insisted that not every song on the LP was about the relationship. Shear collaborated with Matthew Sweet on the album's title track; it also featured "The Other End (of the Telescope)", a collaboration between Mann and Elvis Costello on which Costello provides a guest vocal.

While critical praise continued to flow, Everything's Different Now was a commercial dud. The album peaked at #124, while the lead single "(Believed You Were) Lucky" (co-written with Shear) crawled to number 95.

'Til Tuesday essentially broke up after the release of Everything's Different Now. However, Mann toured under the 'Til Tuesday name with various session players, while legal problems with the band's label Epic prevented her from beginning work on a solo record for several years. (Mann's solo career officially began in 1992.) Hausman, meanwhile, became Mann's manager, a position he holds to this day.

Discography

Albums

* Voices Carry (1985) #19 U.S.

* Welcome Home (1986) #49 U.S.

* Everything's Different Now (1988) #124 U.S.

* Coming Up Close: A Retrospective (greatest-hits collection) (1996)

Singles

*1 "(Believed You Were) Lucky" reached #30 on the Modern Rock Chart.

References

Category:1980s music groups

Category:American New Wave musical groups

es:'Til Tuesday





This text has been derived from 'Til Tuesday on Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0

Details
Performers
 
Label
 
SYQK
Catalog #
 
40314