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Autoamerican

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (12 ratings)
Autoamerican album cover
01
Europa (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:32
$1.29
02
Live It Up (2001 Digital Remaster)
4:10
$1.29
03
Here's Looking At You (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:58
$1.29
04
The Tide Is High (2001 Digital Remaster)
4:44
$1.29
05
Angels On The Balcony (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:36
$1.29
06
Go Through It (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:40
$1.29
07
Do The Dark (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:53
$1.29
08
Rapture (2001 - Remaster)
6:33
$1.29
09
Faces (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:51
$1.29
10
T-Birds (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:58
$1.29
11
Walk Like Me (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:46
$1.29
12
Follow Me (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:00
$1.29
13
Call Me (Original Long Version) (2001 Digital Remaster)
8:04
$1.29
14
Suzy & Jeffrey (2001 Digital Remaster)
4:10
$1.29
15
Rapture (Special Disco Mix) (2001 Digital Remaster)
10:00
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 68:55

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eMusic Review 0

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Ira Robbins

eMusic Contributor

Ira Robbins co-founded Trouser Press magazine in 1974. (Think of it as a pre-Internet music blog). He was later pop music editor at Newsday and has written for ...more »

05.18.11
a Petri platter of unprecedented stylistic ambition
2001 | Label: CHRYSALIS

For a group with a lot at stake, career-wise, Blondie showed a lot of guts in making Autoamerican, a Petri platter of unprecedented stylistic ambition. Rather than play it safe after losing Parallel Lines' commercial momentum with the similar Eat to the Beat, the group tried on all sorts of costumes, not many of which proved flattering. They did break through what was, at the time, rock's formidable resistance to hip-hop by making "Rapture" equally alluring and ridiculous, added a lone American voice to the 2 Tone ska revival by sashaying through the Paragons' "The Tide Is High," and played at American funk in the wah-wah bounce of "Live It Up." Even the galloping cowboy twang of "Go Through It" is amusing, as is the surfbeat pulse of "Walk Like Me." But experimentation is risky. The suave continental soundtrack (plus bewildering recitation) of "Europa" is a terrible opening track, and attempts to frame Deborah Harry as a chanteuse (in the mock mustiness of "Here's Looking at You," the lush cover of the show tune "Follow Me," from Camelot, and the smoky nightclub invocation of "Faces") only serve to highlight the thinness and stiffness of her singing here.

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They Say All Music Guide

The basic Blondie sextet was augmented, or replaced, by numerous session musicians (including lots of uncredited horn and string players) for the group’s fifth album, Autoamerican, on which they continued to expand their stylistic range, with greater success, at least on certain tracks, than they had on Eat to the Beat. A cover of Jamaican group the Paragons’ “The Tide Is High,” released in advance of the album, became a gold-selling number one single, as did the rap pastiche “Rapture,” but, despite their presence, the album stalled in the lower half of the Top Ten and spent fewer weeks in the charts than either of its predecessors. One reason for that, admittedly, was that Chrysalis Records pulled promotion of the disc in favor of pushing lead singer Debbie Harry’s debut solo album, KooKoo, not even bothering to release a third single after scoring two chart-topping hits. But then, it’s hard to imagine what that third single could have been on an album that leads off with a pretentious string-filled instrumental (“Europa”), and also finds Harry crooning ersatz ’20s pop on “Here’s Looking at You” and tackling Broadway show music in a cover of “Follow Me” from Camelot. Though more characteristic, the rest of the tracks are weak compositions indifferently executed. Thus Autoamerican was memorable only for its hits, which would be better heard when placed on a hits compilation. – William Ruhlmann

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