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...Upon My Wicked Son is the first solo album by Andy Prieboy, released in 1990.[1][2] The album cover is "Fallen Angel" by David Sandlin.
...Upon My Wicked Son | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1990 | |||
Genre | Pop rock | |||
Length | 48:42 | |||
Label | Doctor Dream Records, Musidisc | |||
Producer | Andy Prieboy | |||
Andy Prieboy chronology | ||||
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"On the Road Again" is a cover of the Canned Heat song, whose lyrics inspired the album's title. The song "Tomorrow, Wendy", about the suicide of a friend of Prieboy's, bears the rare distinction of having a cover version released (on Concrete Blonde's Bloodletting,) before the original album was released. Prieboy's version of the song features Concrete Blonde's singer Johnette Napolitano on vocals.[3]
Critical reception
editReview scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [4] |
Calgary Herald | B+[3] |
Chicago Tribune | [5] |
Los Angeles Daily News | [6] |
Los Angeles Times | [7] |
The Chicago Tribune stated that the album "showcases guitarist-vocalist Prieboy's knack for inventive pop-rock song-crafting and off-center lyric themes."[5] The Los Angeles Times concluded that Prieboy "gets caught up in arty-smarty cleverness as he jumps from progressive blues to Weill-like theater tune to French cabaret, but at least he's out on the front lines grappling with fundamental human matters."[7]
Track listing
edit- "On the Road Again" (Jim Oden) – 4:44 Performer – Beth Hooker
- "To the Dogs" (Prieboy) – 4:09
- "Montezuma Was a Man of Faith" (Prieboy) – 3:34
- "Tomorrow, Wendy" (Prieboy) – 4:44 Performer – Johnette Napolitano
- "Nearer to Morning" (Prieboy, Ned Leukhardt) – 3:24
- "Man Talk" (Prieboy) – 4:45
- "Loving the Highway Man" (Prieboy) – 3:32
- "The New York Debut of an L.A. Artist (Jazz Crowd)" (Prieboy) – 2:20
- "Joliet" (Prieboy) – 3:27
- "That Was the Voice" (Prieboy) – 3:51
- "For Love" (Prieboy) – 3:05
- "Maybe That's Not Her Head" (Prieboy) – 3:22
- "Big Rock Finish" (Prieboy, Ned Leukhardt) – 3:52
Note: "Maybe That's Not Her Head" and "Big Rock Finish" do not appear on the vinyl or cassette releases of the album.
Personnel
editFrom CD liner notes
- Backing vocals – Dee La Duke, Estefan Bravo, Jeff Hlavary, Joe Chamberlain, John Maxwell, Ken Petrosky, Steve Siegrist, Sue Rawley, Terry Gahan, Trudy Trulove
- Bass – Scott Thunes
- Drums – Dave Scott
- Drums, percussion, drum programming – Ned Leukhardt
- Engineer – Barry Rudolph, Francis Buckley, Joe Tortoricci*, Mike Fennel, Ryan Greene
- Guitar – Marc Moreland, Mikal Reid
- Guitar, piano, keyboards – Andy Prieboy
- Mixed by – Barry Rudolph, Francis Buckley
- Painting [Cover Painting] – David Sandlin
- Photography by – Reggie Ige
- Producer – Andy Prieboy
- Programmed by [Computer] – Mike Fennel
- Trombone – David Dean
- Violin – Michael Barberra*
- Written by – Andy Prieboy (tracks: 2 to 13)
- Notes
From LP liner notes
- Johnette Napolitano appears courtesy of I.R.S. Records.
- Dave Scott appears by the grace of MCA Records and Kill For Thrills.
- Michael Barberra appears through the benevolence of Mary's Danish.
- The artist's home features the collection of Gretchen Victor.
- The cover painting "Fallen Angel" was painted by David Sandlin and licensed through the courtesy of Gracie Mansion Gallery. It comes from the collection of Danny Elfman.
References
edit- ^ "Andy Prieboy Biography by James Christopher Monger". AllMusic. Retrieved 4 August 2024.
- ^ Lounges, Tom (September 7, 1990). "East Chicago's wicked son". The Times. Munster.
- ^ a b Alberts, Sheldon (Mar 17, 1991). "Recent Releases". Calgary Herald. p. A13.
- ^ "Upon My Wicked Son Review by Tom Demalon". AllMusic. Retrieved 4 August 2024.
- ^ a b Popson, Tom (10 Aug 1990). "Andy Prieboy goes solo". Friday. Chicago Tribune. p. R.
- ^ Shuster, Fred (July 6, 1990). "Rock Voodoo Man Casts Spell". Los Angeles Daily News. p. L41.
- ^ a b Cromelin, Richard (Sep 29, 1990). "In the Underground, Dead Can Dance". Los Angeles Times. p. F5.