| | Blondie Autoamerican CD Blondie Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
All tracks have been digitally remastered using 24-bit technology.
Blondie's penultimate album before their breakup, 1981's AUTOAMERICAN is a fine collection of diverse, slickly-produced pop songs, featuring the all-pervasive "Rapture." It's difficult to explain just how omnipresent this song was on Top 40 radio in 1981--only Kim Carnes' "Bette Davis Eyes" and the "Stars on 45" medley had more airplay--or how enormous its cultural impact.
Before "Rapture," rap was little known outside of New York City's outer boroughs, but Debbie Harry's rap, namechecking scene legends Fab Five Freddy and Grandmaster Flash (alongside '60s film auteur Francois Truffaut, for the downtown hipsters), brought the style worldwide. The rap was so groundbreaking that it's easy to forget that the first three minutes of the song, where Harry coos luxuriantly over a slinky bass groove, is some of Blondie's best work, as is the rest of the album.
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. The 2001 reissue strengthened the release by adding as bonus tracks an eight-minute version of "Call Me," the band's previous number one hit theme from the film American Gigolo; "Suzy & Jeffrey," the non-LP B-side of "The Tide Is High," and actually a better track than most of the album cuts on the original record; and a ten-minute "spec
+ 3 Bonus Tracks
Recorded at United Western Studio, Hollywood, California in December 1980. Originally released on Chrysalis (1290). Includes liner notes by Mike Chapman.
Producer: Mike Chapman.
Reissue producer: Kevin Flaherty.
Personnel: Debbie Harry, Howard Kaylan, Mark Volman (vocals); Chris Stein (guitar, timpani); Frank Infante, W.W. Watson, Wa Wa Watson (guitar); Tom Scott (saxophone, lyricon); Steve "Golde" Goldstein, Steve Goldstein (piano, synthesizer); Jimmy Destri (keyboards); Clem Burke (drums); Scott Lesser, Alex Acuña, Ollie Brown, Emil Richards (percussion); B Girls (background vocals).
Liner Note Author: Mike Chapman .
Recording information: Power Station, New York, NY (1980); United Western, Hollywood, CA (1980).
Directors: Denny Vosburgh; Bob Emmer; Shep Gordon.
Photographers: Retna; Bob Gruen; Jeff Mayer.
Blondie: Deborah Harry (vocals); Chris Stein (guitar, bass, vibraphone); James Destri (piano, organ, synthesizer, background vocals); Frank Infante (bass, background vocals); Clem Burke (drums, background vocals).
Additional personnel: Howard Kaylan, Mark Volman (vocals); Jimmie Haskill (arranger); Wa Wa Watson (guitar); Tom Scott (saxophone); Steve Goldstein (piano, synthesizer); Ray Brown (bass); Scott Lesser, Ollie Brown, Emil Richards, Alex Acuna (percussion); B-Girls (b Autoamerican Music | List Price | $8.94 (You save $0.09) | | Category | Rock Albums, Pop CDs, Rock/Pop, New Wave | | Label | Chrysalis | | Orig Year | 1980 | | All Time Sales Rank | 9712  | | CD Universe Part number | 2057097 | | Catalog number | 33595 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Sep 11, 2001 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Engineer | Lenise Bent | | Personnel | Deborah Harry - vocals Clem Burke - drums Chris Stein - guitar, timpani Debbie Harry Jimmy Destri - keyboards Frank Infante - bass, background vocals Steve "Golde" Goldstein James Destri - piano, organ, synthesizer, background vocals W.W. Watson
Also: Tom Scott, Ray Brown, Emil Richards, Alex Acuna, Mark Volman, Howard Kaylan, Ollie Brown, B-Girls, Wa Wa Watson, Jimmie Haskill, Scott Lesser | | Additional Info | Bonus Tracks; Remastered |
Blondie Autoamerican Songs Autoamerican Music Review Average Rating: (3.5 out of 5 stars)   Repeat Buyer People hear my old copy and like it so much I just give them out as gifts! I think I'm up to 3 copies now. Submitted by shadow42wolf (Grand Junction,CO,USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Rapture!!! Autoamerican contains two of Blondie's biggest hits,The Tide Is High and the supreme Rapture.Other standouts include the cinematic instrumental Europa,Angels On The Balcony and the moody Do The Dark. Definetly one of Blondie's key albums Submitted by Mario (San Francisco,Ca ,USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Worst Blondie Album I am a huge Blondie fan, yet I can't even force myself to listen to this album for very long. The only two songs worth listening to on this release (& also the only two reasons it sold so many copies) are "The Tide Is High", & of course, "Rapture". Blondie's released some truly steller albums, don't let this be your first purchase, it may disappoint you. Submitted by Carrie (Dayton, OH) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 0 of 1 found this helpful.
autoamerican I believe the title of this album should have been dumb blondie since the group seems to be satirising some of the less intelligent aspects of feminine behaviour in every song. Although this group has always seemed quinticentially "new wave", the musical scope of the album includes everything from Caribean reggae to big band swing. Of course it also features what must have been one of the greatest cocaine songs ever written (rapture) - disco inspired rap a full decade before hip hop was born. I liked this album for its very versitile musical style and sardonic overtones. Submitted by a reviewer (Indianapolis, IN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 0 of 1 found this helpful.
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Purchase Autoamerican CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Blondie CD (1976) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Autoamerican album
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Recorded in 1976, Blondie's self-titled debut was part of the New York City/CBGB's crowd's initial salvo of punk/new wave, radically different from anything in the American mainstream at the time. While other CBGB scenemakers strove for either artiness (Television) or primitivism ...
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Madonna and Michael Jackson aside, this is supreme pop music and as good as the genre can ever get. Everybody loved Blondie; fans, children, critics, other musicians and senior citizens - and not just because Debbie Harry was its frontperson. This is an unintentional greatest hits record that doesn't let up until the last note of 'Just Go Away' has died. If one wanted to carp, you could have asked for 'Denis' and ...
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Autoamerican was Blondie's last real album (until their 1999 reunion with No Exit), after which the band collapsed in legal problems and solo aspirations. The Hunter was only made because they still owed Chrysalis an album on their contract, and it sounds like the obligatory record it was. "Island of Lost Souls" (the album's only U.S. singles chart entry and, in fact, the only song released as a single in the U.S.) was a try at remaking "The Tide Is High," while ...
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