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Frank Black - Teenager of the Year (CD)

Teenager of the Year
$3.90 - $8.96
4.6 out of 5.0 stars 7 Ratings (7 Reviews)

Album Details: Teenager of the Year

Release Date:01/01/1994
Label:Elektra / Wea
UPC:075596161824

Other Available Formats: Teenager of the Year

User Reviews: Teenager of the Year

  • Overall:

    FRANK BLACK ROCKS

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Apr 2, 2004

    Pros: everything

    Cons: nothing

    i mean, come on, the man has people like david bowie and thom yorke constantly praising him!...this album is so cool. i remember getting sucked in when i was, like, 14 and they played "headache" on the radio, like, once.this is a play all ...the way through album. i love it with all my little heart. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Teenager

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Dec 21, 2001

    I was a big fan of the Pixies, but when Frank went solo, I was skeptical. Teenager of the Year made me a believer. This is one the greatest albums of the 90's.

Pro Reviews: Teenager of the Year

  • All Music Guide

    A sprawling double album, Frank Black's Teenager of the Year builds on the clever, carefully crafted pop he forged on his solo debut and moves even farther away from the Pixies' sound. It feels like the album Black wanted to make since Bossanova: "Whatever Happened to Pong?" and "Thalassocracy" are a one-two blast of energetic fun, but the tight songwriting and detailed arrangements on the strummy "Headache" and gentle, piano-driven "Sir Rockaby" are more interesting. Despite its 22-song length, most of Teenager of the Year's tracks are keepers; the first nine rank among Black's catchiest songs with or without the Pixies. "I Want to Live on an Abstract Plain" and "The Vanishing Spies" mix sweet straightforward melodies with spacy keyboards, and Black delivers a creative love song in "Speedy Marie"; the first letter of each line in the song's second half spells out his girlfriend's name. The driving, anthemic "Freedom Rock" is one of the album's more ambitious tracks, along with the cat...chy, educational "Ole Mulholland," a musical history lesson about William Mulholland, the developer and planner of Los Angeles' municipal water system. Teenager's beginning is so consistent, it's not surprising that its second half isn't quite as essential, but it's still interesting. The spacy, ska-tinged "Fiddle Riddle," the cryptic "Superabound," and the sprightly final track "Pie in the Sky" -- which sounds strangely like a punk version of Gary U.S. Bonds' hit "A Quarter to Three" -- all add to the album's individuality. Even less-developed songs like "Fazer Eyes" and "The Hostest with the Mostest" are still worthwhile. Though his later albums took a sparer, simpler approach, Teenager of the Year's ambition and quirkiness begin Black's evolution into a cult artist who makes the music he wants to, regardless of whether or not it's fashionable. - Heather Phares, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Frank Black

Inverting his stage name from Black Francis to Frank Black, the former Pixies lead singer/songwriter embarked on a solo career after he broke up the band in early 1993; actually, he began recording his solo album before he told the band the news. Working with former Pere Ubu member Eric Drew Feldman, Black occasionally heads into the ferocious post-punk guitar territory... Read more