Jump to content

New Radicals: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Fritz Saalfeld (talk | contribs)
m It's a quote and it's misspelled in the original. That's why it says (sic) behind it
Citrus538 (talk | contribs)
Line 48: Line 48:
In 2003, a new Gregg Alexander song entitled "[[A Love Like That]]" was released at [http://www.PickTheHits.com PickTheHits.com], a website where users could rate new music. While it was uncredited, fans immediately recognized Alexander's voice and parts of the lyrics that had already appeared in the booklet for ''Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too.'' The song was (as official sites listing Alexander's song repertoire reveal) written by Alexander and Rick Nowels.{{ref|LoveLikeThat}}
In 2003, a new Gregg Alexander song entitled "[[A Love Like That]]" was released at [http://www.PickTheHits.com PickTheHits.com], a website where users could rate new music. While it was uncredited, fans immediately recognized Alexander's voice and parts of the lyrics that had already appeared in the booklet for ''Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too.'' The song was (as official sites listing Alexander's song repertoire reveal) written by Alexander and Rick Nowels.{{ref|LoveLikeThat}}


Since their breakup, the New Radicals' songs have been used for several commercials and trailers (for example the trailer to ''[[Big Daddy]]'' with [[Adam Sandler]] and the 2001 film ''[[Bubble Boy]]''), TV shows (like ''[[Scrubs (TV show)|Scrubs]]'' and ''[[JAG]]''), on soundtracks (such as ''[[A Walk to Remember (film)|A Walk to Remember]]'' and ''[[Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed]]'') and covered by artists such as [[Mandy Moore]] and [[Johnathon Foreman]] (Lead singer of [[Switchfoot]]) and [[Hall & Oates]] (both covered "Someday We'll Know". Moore and Foreman on the soundtrack to ''A Walk to Remember'', Hall & Oates on their 2003 album ''[[Do It For Love]]''). Ronan Keating also covered the song during his 2002 Destination Everywhere tour and included "You Get What You Give" in his [[celebrity playlist]] on [[iTunes Music Store|iTunes]], as did [[Joni Mitchell]] on her ''Artist's Choice'' CD, released by [[Starbucks]]' [[Hear Music]]. She also declared the New Radicals "the only thing I heard in many years that I thought had greatness in it... I loved that song 'You Get What You Give.' It was a big hit, and I said, 'Where did they go?' It turns out the guy [Gregg Alexander] quit. I thought, 'Good for him.' I knew he was my kind of guy."{{ref|Mitchell}}
Since their breakup, the New Radicals' songs have been used for several commercials and trailers (for example the trailer to ''[[Big Daddy]]'' with [[Adam Sandler]] and the 2001 film ''[[Bubble Boy]]''), TV shows (like ''[[Scrubs (TV show)|Scrubs]]'' and ''[[JAG]]''), on soundtracks (such as ''[[A Walk to Remember (film)|A Walk to Remember]]'' and ''[[Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed]]'') and covered by artists such as [[Mandy Moore]] and [[Jonathon Foreman]] (Lead singer of [[Switchfoot]]) and [[Hall & Oates]] (both covered "Someday We'll Know". Moore and Foreman on the soundtrack to ''A Walk to Remember'', Hall & Oates on their 2003 album ''[[Do It For Love]]''). Ronan Keating also covered the song during his 2002 Destination Everywhere tour and included "You Get What You Give" in his [[celebrity playlist]] on [[iTunes Music Store|iTunes]], as did [[Joni Mitchell]] on her ''Artist's Choice'' CD, released by [[Starbucks]]' [[Hear Music]]. She also declared the New Radicals "the only thing I heard in many years that I thought had greatness in it... I loved that song 'You Get What You Give.' It was a big hit, and I said, 'Where did they go?' It turns out the guy [Gregg Alexander] quit. I thought, 'Good for him.' I knew he was my kind of guy."{{ref|Mitchell}}


In 2005 [[LMC]] did a remix of "You Get What You Give" under the title "Don't Let Go" by LMC vs New Radicals. A new version of the remix, with new vocals by [[Rachel McFarlane]] replacing the [[Sampling (music)|samples]] from the original version, was released in January 2006 as a single, this time under the song's original title "You Get What You Give".
In 2005 [[LMC]] did a remix of "You Get What You Give" under the title "Don't Let Go" by LMC vs New Radicals. A new version of the remix, with new vocals by [[Rachel McFarlane]] replacing the [[Sampling (music)|samples]] from the original version, was released in January 2006 as a single, this time under the song's original title "You Get What You Give".

Revision as of 06:09, 29 April 2006

New Radicals
File:New Radicals Gregg Alexander.jpg
Background information
Years active1997–1999

The New Radicals were an American rock band in the late 1990s, centered around front man Gregg Alexander, who wrote and produced all of their songs and was the sole constant member. They released only one album, 1998's Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too, a pop rock album heavily influenced by the funk, rock and soul of the 1970s, containing—amongst radio-friendly modern rock tracks and love songs—strong criticism of Corporate America.

The band is best known for their debut single "You Get What You Give", which became a top 5 hit in the United Kingdom and whose celebrity-dissing lyrics at the end of the song provided a minor media spectacle.

Tired of touring and promotional interviews, Alexander disbanded the group in mid 1999 before the release of their second single, "Someday We'll Know", to focus on writing and producing songs for other artists. As a result, "Someday We'll Know" received little attention in most countries and the band is widely considered a one-hit wonder.

Members

New Radicals (L-R): Jim McGorman, Gregg Alexander, Stu Johnson, Sasha, Danielle Brisebois, Brad Fernquist

The New Radicals had a "revolving door policy" and no permanent members other than Alexander, who produced, wrote, sung and played various instruments for the band. The only other person considered a relatively constant member was former child actress Danielle Brisebois.[1] She acted as background singer and percussionist on the album, at live shows and in the band's music videos. She also co-wrote their second single "Someday We'll Know", with Alexander and Debra Holland. Brisebois had previously worked with Alexander on his 1992 album Intoxifornication and on her 1994 solo debut Arrive All Over You.

Most of the musicians who worked on Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too were hired session musicians, including keyboardist Greg Phillinganes (an ex-member of Stevie Wonder's band Wonderlove), drummer Josh Freese, Paul McCartney's guitarist Rusty Anderson and producer Rick Nowels who played piano for the album (he also produced Alexander's debut album Michigan Rain). Other musicians who were at some point part of the live line-up include drummer Stuart Johnson, guitarist Bradley Fernquist, keyboardist Jim McGorman and bassist Sasha. The latter two were later also part of the house band in Rock Star: INXS.[2]

History

The New Radicals were formed in Los Angeles, California in 1997 by Gregg Alexander, who had previously released two unsuccessful solo albums, 1989's Michigan Rain and 1992's Intoxifornication. Michael Rosenblatt, MCA Records' A&R Senior Vice President, signed the band to the label in 1998[3] and Alexander received an $600,000 advance for their first (and only) album, Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too.[4] The album was released on October 20, 1998 and was well received by music critics, who praised the record for its wide range of untypical influences for a modern pop-rock album, such as Todd Rundgren, World Party and Hall & Oates, and compared its funk and soul-influenced upbeat pop rock to the early work of Prince and Mick Jagger.

Some critics however disliked the album's themes — Alexander's criticism of society and the frequent references to drugs and sex that run throughout the album — denoting them as "shallow posturing" and "empty social pronouncements",[5] while others found Alexander's social criticism and observations "would sound clichéd if they werent [sic] so insightful and articulated with such uninhibited truth."[6] Also popular with the general audience, the album reached #10 on the UK Albums Chart and #41 on the Billboard 200 in the U.S., where it also achieved platinum status (1,000,000 copies sold). It was also certified gold in the United Kingdom (100,000 copies sold) and in Canada (50,000 copies sold).

To promote their album, the New Radicals embarked on a tour through the United States, starting in late 1998. Apart from many concerts and festivals the tour also included several live performance on the radio, appearances at The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Nickelodeon's All That and a performance at the House of Blues in Chicago on New Year's Eve 1999—which is probably the only New Radicals show of which bootlegs are circulating.[7] They also opened for the Goo Goo Dolls on their tour starting March 30, 1999.[8]

The album was followed on April 20, 1999 by the release of their first single, "You Get What You Give" (co-written with Rick Nowels), which reached #36 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and #5 on the UK Singles Chart, got heavy radio airplay and rotation on MTV and received much media attention. In large part this attention focused on the celebrity-slamming line "Fashion shoots with Beck and Hanson/ Courtney Love and Marilyn Manson/ You're all fakes run to your mansions/ Come around we'll kick your ass in" (Audio file "New_Radicals_-_You_Get_What_You_Give_(clip).ogg" not found).

When asked about it in an interview, Marilyn Manson replied he was "not mad that [Alexander] said he'd kick my ass, I just don't want to be used in the same sentence with Courtney Love" and would "crack his skull open if I see him."[9] Beck reported that "I was in a grocery store and he [Alexander] came running up to me, so apologetic, and saying, 'I hope you weren't offended. It wasn't supposed to be personal.' I was kind of pleased, because he's a big guy."[10] Hanson never commented on the song directly, but co-wrote the song "Lost Without Each Other" from their 2004 album Underneath with Alexander. Zac Hanson said that "It was cool working with Gregg... [he]'s definitely a character but he's a cool guy."[11] According to a poster on alt.fan.courtney-love, Love remarked at a concert that she liked the song but thought it "got all faux-radical toward the end, like a bad blue-eyed soul song" with "the worst Casio keyboard bridge I've ever heard".[12]

Following the mass media's excitement about the celebrity diss, Alexander explained that the lyrics, along with the lines directly preceding it ("Health insurance rip off lying/ FDA big bankers buying/ Fake computer crashes dining/ Cloning while they're multiplying") were an experiment to see if the media would focus on the real issues, or on the celebrity dissing.[13] Similar complaints and attacks on Christian religion, American society, politics and corporations can be found in other songs on the album as well, and Alexander would often use promotional interviews to talk about these topics, complaining about—among other things—corrupt, greedy politicians and corporate officers, credit card interest, the poor American social security system and lack of education.[14]

File:New Radicals Someday Well Know video.jpg
Gregg Alexander, wearing one of his trademark bucket hats in the music video for "Someday We'll Know".

When the band canceled their appearance at the Atlanta open air music festival RockFest, as well as their UK tour (scheduled to start on May 17, 1999) rumors started they would break up, while MCA Records claimed an unspecified member of the band (although explicitly not Alexander) being ill was the cause for the canceled shows.[15] The New Radicals went on to shoot the video for their second single "Someday We'll Know", however, less than two weeks before its release, Gregg Alexander issued a press release on July 12, 1999 announcing the breakup of the group. He stated that he "accomplished all of [his] goals with this record" and that "the fatigue of traveling & getting three hours sleep in a different hotel every night to do boring 'hanging and schmoozing' with radio and retail people, is definitely not for [him]", that he "lost interest in fronting a 'One Hit Wonder' to the point that [he] was wearing a hat while performing so that people wouldn't see [his] lack of enthusiasm" and that he would go on to form a production company to focus on producing and writing songs freelance for other artists.[16] His first production work after the New Radicals' breakup was the unreleased album Portable Life by fellow Radical Danielle Brisebois, originally set to be released in October 1999, but canceled by RCA Records (not to be confused with the New Radicals' record label MCA Records). Given the band's breakup and the resulting lack of promotion, "Someday We'll Know" failed to have a notable impact on the charts (it did not chart the Billboard Hot 100 and reached only #28 on the US Adult Top 40 and #48 on the UK Singles Chart), and the band is therefore regarded as a one-hit wonder.

Although no third single was released, there are some (conflicting) clues as to what would have been the third single: Certain promotional copies of Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too come with a sticker reading "includes 'You Get What You Give' 'I Don't Wanna Die Anymore' 'Someday We'll Know'",[17] suggesting that "I Don't Wanna Die Anymore" would join the other two as a single release. Several websites selling the album also marked the track as "Album Version", indicating that there would be a single version at some point.[18] However, there also exist copies of "Mother We Just Can't Get Enough" as both a one-track promotional single[19] and as a 4-track commercial single with a barcode.[20] These apparently never made it to retail and were probably test pressings.

Legacy

In the years following the New Radicals' breakup, Alexander worked with artists such as Ronan Keating, Sophie Ellis-Bextor and Enrique Iglesias, often collaborating with producer/songwriter Rick Nowels. His most successful song as a producer/songwriter was the 2003 Grammy Award-winning "The Game of Love" by Santana and Michelle Branch.

In 2003, a new Gregg Alexander song entitled "A Love Like That" was released at PickTheHits.com, a website where users could rate new music. While it was uncredited, fans immediately recognized Alexander's voice and parts of the lyrics that had already appeared in the booklet for Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too. The song was (as official sites listing Alexander's song repertoire reveal) written by Alexander and Rick Nowels.[21]

Since their breakup, the New Radicals' songs have been used for several commercials and trailers (for example the trailer to Big Daddy with Adam Sandler and the 2001 film Bubble Boy), TV shows (like Scrubs and JAG), on soundtracks (such as A Walk to Remember and Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed) and covered by artists such as Mandy Moore and Jonathon Foreman (Lead singer of Switchfoot) and Hall & Oates (both covered "Someday We'll Know". Moore and Foreman on the soundtrack to A Walk to Remember, Hall & Oates on their 2003 album Do It For Love). Ronan Keating also covered the song during his 2002 Destination Everywhere tour and included "You Get What You Give" in his celebrity playlist on iTunes, as did Joni Mitchell on her Artist's Choice CD, released by Starbucks' Hear Music. She also declared the New Radicals "the only thing I heard in many years that I thought had greatness in it... I loved that song 'You Get What You Give.' It was a big hit, and I said, 'Where did they go?' It turns out the guy [Gregg Alexander] quit. I thought, 'Good for him.' I knew he was my kind of guy."[22]

In 2005 LMC did a remix of "You Get What You Give" under the title "Don't Let Go" by LMC vs New Radicals. A new version of the remix, with new vocals by Rachel McFarlane replacing the samples from the original version, was released in January 2006 as a single, this time under the song's original title "You Get What You Give".

Audio sample

Discography

Album:

Singles:

Official live recordings:

  • "You Get What You Give" (Live at WXPN's World Cafe) on Live at the World Cafe - Volume 8 (1999)
  • "You Get What You Give" (Live at KBCO, February 1, 1999) on KBCO Studio C - Volume 11 (1999)

References

  1. ^ {{cite AV media}}: Empty citation (help)
  2. ^ "Rock Star: INXS The House Band". Retrieved December 8. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ "Michael Rosenblatt Sr. Vice President, A&R MCA Records". Retrieved January 1. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ Robert Christgau. "The Sound of the City". Village Voice. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ Rickey Wright. "Editorial Reviews: Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too". Amazon.com. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ Bruce Warren. "New Radicals - Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too". WXPN.org. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ http://www.hitmanscorner.com/others/newradicals_live.htm Accessed on October 5 2005
  8. ^ "Goo Goo Dolls Tap New Radicals For Charitable Tour". MTV.com. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ "New Radicals Discuss Slighting Marilyn Manson And Courtney Love, Manson Responds". MTV.com. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ "No turning Beck". The Sunday Times. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ http://www.livedaily.com/news/6813.html?t=98 URL accessed on December 30, 2005
  12. ^ http://groups.google.co.uk/group/alt.fan.courtney-love/browse_thread/thread/bf7f5f42e2f4c966/9b3899cdb4967130?lnk=st&q=%22C.Love+is+a+fake%22&rnum=1&hl=en#9b3899cdb4967130
  13. ^ "New Radicals Song Misunderstood, Singer Says". VH1.com. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ Austin Clarke (1999). ""It's the End of the World as We Know It (and New Radicals are going to kick your a$$?!?)"". Watch (Winter '99): 16–18.
  15. ^ "New Radicals Cancel RockFest Appearance". MTV.com. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ "New Radicals Dissolves". Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  17. ^ "Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too with promo sticker". Retrieved February 18. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too on Msn Music. Accessed on October 28 2005.
  19. ^ http://eil.com/shop/moreinfo.asp?catalogid=311851 URL accessed on October 5 2005
  20. ^ "Mother We Just Can't Get Enough single". Retrieved February 10. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  21. ^ "A Love Like That song information". Warner Chappell Music. Retrieved December 9. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  22. ^ "Joni Mitchell's Blue". Rolling Stone. Retrieved August 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)

External links