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Double Nickels on the Dime

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Double Nickels on the Dime
Doublenickels.jpg
Studio album by Minutemen
Released July 1984
Recorded November 1983,
April 1984 at Radio Tokyo Studios, Venice, California
Genre
Length 81:01 (lengths vary)
Label SST
Producer Ethan James
Minutemen chronology
The Politics of Time
(1984)The Politics of Time1984
Double Nickels on the Dime
(1984)
Project: Mersh
(1985)Project: Mersh1985

Double Nickels on the Dime is the third studio album by American punk trio Minutemen, released on the Californian independent record label SST Records in 1984. A double album containing 45 songs, Double Nickels on the Dime combines elements of punk rock, funk, country, spoken word and jazz, and references a variety of themes, from the Vietnam War and racism in America, to working class experience and linguistics.

After recording new material, the band each selected songs for different sides of the double album, with the fourth side named "Chaff". Several songs on Double Nickels on the Dime were outsourced to or inspired by contemporaries, such as Black Flag's Henry Rollins and Jack Brewer of Saccharine Trust.

Double Nickels on the Dime is seen not only as Minutemen's crowning achievement, but, according to critic Mark Deming, "one of the very best American rock albums of the 1980s".[2] The album now appears on many professional lists of the all-time best rock albums, including Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.[3] Slant Magazine listed the album at #77 on its list of "Best Albums of the 1980s".[4]

Background

Minutemen were formed by guitarist D. Boon and bassist Mike Watt, both from San Pedro, California, in 1980.[5] After their previous band, The Reactionaries, disbanded in 1979, the pair continued to write new material and formed the band with drummer Frank Tonche a year later. Minutemen signed to the Californian independent record label SST Records following their second gig.[6] George Hurley, the former drummer of The Reactionaries, replaced Tonche as drummer soon afterwards. The Minutemen were noted in the California punk scene for a philosophy of "jamming econo"; a sense of thriftiness reflected in their touring and presentation.[5] They soon released numerous recordings through SST and their own label, New Alliance Records, while touring with hardcore punk bands like Black Flag and Hüsker Dü.[7]

In January 1983, Minutemen were asked by ex-Blue Cheer keyboardist and local producer Ethan James to contribute a song to Radio Tokyo Tapes, a compilation named after the Californian studio where James worked. The band agreed and contributed three songs to the compilation, with James recording them all for free. These three songs, and another five recorded in May 1983 for a total of $50, were included in their 1983 EP Buzz or Howl Under the Influence of Heat. The band had recorded solely with SST engineer Spot prior to the recordings.[8] However, they were so impressed by the sessions that they enlisted James to record their next full-length album; Watt later commented: "Ethan, although not knowing us much, tapped right in." After their European tour in mid-1983 with Black Flag, Minutemen entered Radio Tokyo Studios in November to record their next studio album.[9]

Recording and production

Minutemen originally recorded an "album's worth of material" with James in November 1983 in Radio Tokyo Studios. However, after hearing labelmates Hüsker Dü's double album Zen Arcade (1984), which had been recorded a month earlier, Minutemen decided to write more material. Watt later commented: "It wasn't really a competition even. When I wrote 'Take that Hüskers!" in [the album's liner notes] it was acknowledging that they gave us the idea to make a double album."[10] Unlike Hüsker Dü's Zen Arcade, Minutemen did not have a unifying concept, but soon decided that the record's concept would be their cars.[11]

The band wrote almost two dozen more songs for a second recording session with James in April 1984.[12] Double Nickels on the Dime was then mixed on a single eight-track in one night by James and cost $1,100 to record.[13] Several songs on the album were recorded elsewhere; a studio-recorded cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Don't Look Now" was replaced with a live version of the song,[14] and according to Watt, "Love Dance" was written at Ian MacKaye's Dischord House.[15]

For sequencing, the band decided that each band member would be allocated a side of the record, an arrangement inspired by Pink Floyd's 1969 double album Ummagumma.[13] The band drew straws to select songs; Hurley won the draw and decided to pick his solo track "You Need the Glory", followed by Boon and Watt.[16] The fourth side of the record was named "Side Chaff", an admission that the songs present were the leftover songs.[17]

Music

The album is referred by Watt to be their art record in the documentary "We Jam Econo- The Story of The Minutemen". The songwriting styles of Boon and Watt on Double Nickels on the Dime contrasted. Boon tended to write the band's anthems, and often explored wider political issues. "This Ain't No Picnic", was an example of his approach. Exploring racism and the strife of the working class with both gravity and humor, he composed the song after his supervisor would not let him listen to jazz and soul music on the radio at his day job, claiming it was "nigger shit."[18]

Watt favored complex and abstract lyrical themes, exemplified by songs such as "The Glory Of Man" and "My Heart and the Real World". Influenced by James Joyce's novel Ulysses (the subject of "June 16th") and the stream of consciousness literary technique in general, Watt's lyrics were often complex and philosophical. On "Take 5, D.", Boon felt that the lyrics were "too spacey". Watt agreed to rewrite the song, adding: "There ain't nothing going to be more real." He found a new set of lyrics: a note from a friend's landlady about a shower.[18]

Double Nickels on the Dime contained several inside jokes that were missed by the band's audience. Watt later remarked: "No one knew what the fuck we were talking about. We'd explain it to people and they'd say, 'I don't get it, what's so funny about that?' And we couldn't tell them because it was our whole angle on the rock & roll, our worldview on the music scene."[13]

Imagery

The album was named Double Nickels on the Dime as a reaction to the Sammy Hagar song "I Can't Drive 55," a protest against the federally imposed speed limit of 55 miles per hour on all U.S. highways.[13] Minutemen decided that driving fast "wasn't terribly defiant"; Watt later commented that "the big rebellion thing was writing your own fuckin' songs and trying to come up with your own story, your own picture, your own book, whatever. So he can't drive 55, because that was the national speed limit? Okay, we'll drive 55, but we'll make crazy music."[12]

The band illustrated the theme on the cover of Double Nickels on the Dime, which depicts Watt driving his Volkswagen Beetle at exactly 55 miles per hour ("double nickels" in trucker slang) traveling southbound through downtown Los Angeles on Route 110, also known as the Harbor Freeway, toward the band's hometown of San Pedro, California. "The title means fifty-five miles per hour on the button, like we were Johnny Conservative."[12][19] Dirk Vandenberg, the band's "buddy/contributor," took photos from the backseat as Watt drove under the sign to San Pedro; it took three circuits of the highway and two days of photography before Minutemen were happy with the cover.[20] Vandenberg later commented on the cover art: "There were three elements that Mike [Watt] wanted in the photo: a natural kind of glint in his eyes reflected in the rearview mirror, the speedometer pinned exactly at 55mph, and, of course, the San Pedro sign guiding us home". However, when the cover was presented to SST, "someone botched the cropping for the print and cut off the end of the word Pedro."[20]

Release

SST Records released Double Nickels on the Dime on double vinyl in July 1984. SST delayed the release of Zen Arcade by Hüsker Dü so that both albums could be released simultaneously.[21] After the release of Double Nickels on the Dime, Minutemen toured almost constantly to promote the record. One 1984 tour saw the band playing 57 dates in 63 days.[22] The album sold fifteen thousand copies during 1984, a respectable amount for a band on an independent record label.[13] As of 2008, Double Nickels on the Dime remains Minutemen's best-selling record.[13]

No singles were released to promote Double Nickels on the Dime, but two videos, "This Ain't No Picnic" and "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love" (a cover of a song by Van Halen, which the aforementioned Hagar would eventually join), were released as "flyers".[11] Made for $440 by a University of California, Los Angeles graduate, Anthony Johnson, "This Ain't No Picnic" was Minutemen's first video and was later nominated for an MTV award.[22] The video for "This Ain't No Picnic" features the band playing amidst rubble as a fighter plane "piloted" by Ronald Reagan, edited from public domain footage, fires at them.[11] The video of "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love", released by SST as a promotional video, was a 40-second recording of a live performance.

In August 1987, Watt and producer Vitus Matare remastered Double Nickels on the Dime for a CD release. To ensure that the CD would be compatible with all players, they omitted all car jams except Boon's, and three songs: "Mr. Robot's Holy Orders", "Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love" and "Little Man With A Gun In His Hand." Watt commented later that the remix was a "nightmare" and "totally worse than the Ethan James mix."[23] Watt reverted to the original mix for a 1989 CD release of Double Nickels on the Dime,[23] but did not include the previously omitted songs. In a January 2006 interview, Watt announced his intention to discuss a remastered full Double Nickels on the Dime CD release with SST owner Greg Ginn.[24]

Critical recognition

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 5/5 stars[2]
Robert Christgau A−[25]
The New York Times (positive)[26]
MusicHound 5/5 stars[27]
Rolling Stone Album Guide 5/5 stars[28]

Upon its release, Double Nickels on the Dime received critical acclaim from a range of American critics; however as a regional independent record label, many of SST's releases did not attract attention from British music magazines. Village Voice critic Robert Christgau gave Double Nickels on the Dime an A- rating, describing Boon as a "somewhat limited singer" but "a hell of a reader, with a guitar that rhymes", and remarking "this is poetry-with-jazz as it always should have been."[25] Christgau later said that he underrated the album on its original release.[29] Double Nickels on the Dime placed at number 14 in the publication's end of year Pazz & Jop critics' poll.[30] Reviewing the album in February 1985 for Rolling Stone, David Fricke awarded the album three and a half stars, and also praised Boon's technique, stating: "The telegraphic stutter and almost scientific angularity of singer-guitarist D. Boon's chordings and breakneck solos heighten the jazzier tangents he dares to take," but that "Double Nickels on the Dime's best moments go far too quickly."[31]

Later reviews have also been positive: Allmusic's Mark Deming described Double Nickels on the Dime as a "quantum leap into greatness" for Minutemen, describing the album as "full of striking moments that cohere into a truly remarkable whole" and awarding a full five stars.[2] Journalist Michael Azerrad, profiling Minutemen in his book Our Band Could Be Your Life (titled after a lyric from "History Lesson – Part II"), named Double Nickels on the Dime as "one of the greatest achievements of the indie era" and described it as a "Whitman's sampler of left-wing politics, moving autobiographical vignettes, and twisted Beefheartian twang".[13] Several publications have raised their rating of the album in the years since its release; Rolling Stone re-reviewed Double Nickels on the Dime for the 2004 Album Guide and gave it its classic rating, a full five stars.[28]

Although not commercially successful upon its release, Double Nickels on the Dime marked the point where many punk bands began to ignore the stylistic limitations of the hardcore scene. According to American Hardcore: A Tribal History author Steven Blush, Double Nickels on the Dime was, along with Zen Arcade, "either the pinnacle or downfall of the pure hardcore scene."[32] Watt later commented that Double Nickels on the Dime was the "best album I ever played on."[11]

Accolades

The information regarding accolades attributed to Double Nickels on the Dime is adapted from AcclaimedMusic.net.[33]

Publication Country Accolade Year Rank
Blender U.S. The 100 Greatest American Albums of All Time 2002 83
Pitchfork U.S. Top 100 Albums of the 1980s 2006 17[34]
Rolling Stone U.S. The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time 2004 411[3]
Rolling Stone U.S. The Essential 200 Rock Records *
* designates unordered lists.

Track listing

Original vinyl release

Side D.
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Anxious Mo-Fo"   D. Boon, Mike Watt 1:19
2. "Theatre Is the Life of You"   Boon, Watt 1:30
3. "Viet Nam"   Boon 1:27
4. "Cohesion"   Boon 1:55
5. "It's Expected I'm Gone"   Watt 2:04
6. "#1 Hit Song"   Boon, George Hurley 1:47
7. "Two Beads at the End"   Boon, Hurley 1:52
8. "Do You Want New Wave or Do You Want the Truth?"   Watt 1:49
9. "Don't Look Now" (Live; Creedence Clearwater Revival cover; Omitted from 1987 CD release) John Fogerty 1:46
10. "Shit from an Old Notebook"   Boon, Watt 1:35
11. "Nature Without Man"   Chuck Dukowski, Boon 1:45
12. "One Reporter's Opinion"   Watt 1:50
Total length:
20:37
Side Mike
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Political Song for Michael Jackson to Sing"   Watt 1:33
2. "Maybe Partying Will Help"   Boon, Watt 1:56
3. "Toadies"   Watt 1:38
4. "Retreat"   Watt 2:01
5. "The Big Foist"   Watt 1:29
6. "God Bows to Math"   Jack Brewer, Watt 1:15
7. "Corona"   Boon 2:24
8. "The Glory of Man"   Watt 2:55
9. "Take 5, D."   Joe Baiza, John Rocknowski, Dirk Vandenberg, Watt 1:40
10. "My Heart and the Real World"   Watt 1:05
11. "History Lesson - Part II"   Watt 2:10
Total length:
20:06
Side George
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "You Need the Glory"   Hurley 2:01
2. "The Roar of the Masses Could Be Farts"   Vandenberg, Watt 1:20
3. "Mr. Robot's Holy Orders" (Omitted from all CD releases) Hurley 3:05
4. "West Germany"   Boon 1:48
5. "The Politics of Time"   Watt 1:10
6. "Themselves"   Boon 1:17
7. "Please Don't Be Gentle with Me"   Jack Brewer, Watt 0:46
8. "Nothing Indeed"   Hurley, Watt 1:21
9. "No Exchange"   Hurley, Watt 1:50
10. "There Ain't Shit on T.V. Tonight"   Hurley, Watt 1:34
11. "This Ain't No Picnic"   Boon 1:56
12. "Spillage"   Watt 1:51
Total length:
19:59
Side Chaff
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Untitled Song for Latin America"   Boon 2:03
2. "Jesus and Tequila"   Boon, Joe Carducci 2:52
3. "June 16th"   Watt 1:48
4. "Storm in My House"   Boon, Henry Rollins 1:57
5. "Martin's Story"   Martin Tamburovich, Watt 0:51
6. "Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love" (Van Halen cover; Omitted from all CD releases) Eddie Van Halen, Alex Van Halen, David Lee Roth, Michael Anthony 0:40
7. "Dr. Wu" (Steely Dan cover; Omitted from 1987 CD release) Donald Fagen, Walter Becker 1:44
8. "Little Man with a Gun in His Hand" (Omitted from all CD releases) Boon, Chuck Dukowski 2:53
9. "The World According to Nouns"   Watt 2:05
10. "Love Dance"   Boon 2:00
Total length:
18:53

Differences

To ensure that the CD version would be compatible with all players, the following tracks were omitted from all CD releases: "Mr. Robot's Holy Orders", "Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love" and "Little Man With A Gun In His Hand". "Don't Look Now" and "Dr. Wu" were removed from 1987 release, but included in 1989 release. Three of the "car jams" were removed from 1989 release, but included in 1987 release.

Credits

All information taken from the 1989 CD release of Double Nickels on the Dime:

Notes

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Deming, Mark. Double Nickels on the Dime at AllMusic. Retrieved 25 July 2005.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Best Albums of the 1980s | Music | Slant Magazine
  5. 5.0 5.1 Azerrad, 2001. p. 67
  6. Azerrad, 2001. p. 68
  7. Fournier, 2007. p. 2
  8. Fournier, 2007. p. 7
  9. Fournier, 2007. p. 8
  10. Fournier, 2007. pp. 9-10
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Azerrad, 2001. p. 81
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Fournier, 2007. p. 10
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 13.5 13.6 Azerrad, 2001. p. 82
  14. Fournier, 2007. p. 29
  15. Fournier, 2007. p. 102
  16. Fournier, 2007. p. 63
  17. Fournier, 2007. p. 12
  18. 18.0 18.1 Azerrad, 2001. p. 83
  19. Azerrad p.82.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Fournier, 2007. p. 11
  21. Azerrad, 2001. p. 182
  22. 22.0 22.1 Azerrad, 2001. p. 84
  23. 23.0 23.1 Fournier, 2007. p. 69
  24. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  25. 25.0 25.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Relevant part also posted at Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  26. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  27. [1]
  28. 28.0 28.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  29. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (Review of Michael Azerrad's Our Band Could Be Your Life.)
  30. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  31. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Posted January 22, 1997.
  32. Fournier, 2007. p. 9
  33. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  34. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

References

External links