Transmission (Gay Dad Album)
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''Transmission'' is the second and final studio album by London band
Gay Dad Gay Dad were an English rock band that formed in London in 1994 and broke up in 2002. The line-up of the band has included Cliff Jones (guitarist/vocalist), Nick "Baz" Crowe (drummer), James Riseboro (keyboardist), Nigel Hoyle (bassist) and ...
, released via
B-Unique B-Unique Records is a London-based record label, and publishing company founded in 2001 by Mark Lewis and Martin Toher. B-Unique's current roster includes John Newman, Kodaline, James Bay, The Mispers, Darlia, Benjamin Francis Leftwich, Lu ...
on 24 September 2001. The music is a drastically changed from their glam rock, neo-psychedelia,
krautrock Krautrock (also called , German for ) is a broad genre of experimental rock Experimental rock, also called avant-rock, is a subgenre of rock music that pushes the boundaries of common composition and performance technique or which experiments ...
, and gospel and indie pop style of previous album, into much more electronic style. The album itself was met with mixed reviews, and was not a commercial success.


Background and production

Gay Dad released their debut studio album ''
Leisure Noise ''Leisure Noise'' is the first album by London band Gay Dad, released via London Records and Sire Records on 7 June 1999. The album is a blending of glam rock, neo-psychedelia, krautrock and gospel into indie pop. Lyrically it is often about and ...
'' in June 1999. In spite of its mixed reception, it peaked at number 14 in the UK. Two of its three singles – "To Earth with Love" and "Joy!" – reached the top 40 in the UK Singles Chart, with the former peaking at number ten. In November 1999, guitarist Charley Stone left the band, and was temporarily replaced by Andy Bell of Hurricane No. 1, and then by Stewart Forrester. By this point, the band were in the process of writing material for their next album. They had started recorded in London in early 2000; by August of that year, Cliff Jones revealed that the band had felt fatigued from their recent touring that the recording proved unfruitful. ''Transmission'' was recorded in late 2000 and early 2001, produced by Ben Chapman and the band. The recording process was handled for the most part by Roger Tebutt, who also did additional recording for "Plane Going Down", "Dinosaur", and "Everything Changes". Fulton Dingley recorded "Nightclub" and "Dinosaur", and did additional recording for "Transmission". Mark Firth and Tom Elmhurst recorded "Plane Going Down"; Danton Supple recorded "Everything Changes". Stephen Harris mixed the recordings, before the album was mastered by Geoff Pesche at The Townhouse Studios.


Composition and lyrics

Musically, the sound of ''Transmission'' has been described as glam rock, and
electronica Electronica is both a broad group of electronic-based music styles intended for listening rather than strictly for dancing and a music scene that started in the early 1990s in the United Kingdom. In the United States, the term is mostly used to r ...
. Jones, Nicholas Crowe, and Nigel Hoyle wrote "Transmission", "Now Always and Forever", "Nightclub", "Harder Faster", "All My Life", "Dinosaur", and "Promise of a Miracle", while "Plane Going Down", "Breathe", "Shoot Freak", "Keep It Heavy", and "Everything Changes" were credited to Jones, James Riseboro, Crowe, and Hoyle. The album's opening song "Transmission" was reminiscent of the Manic Street Preachers' early glam pop work. "Now Always and Forever" is representative of the remainder of the album, with its loop-based structure, accompanied by other effects, such as the sound of wind and echo. "Harder Faster" comes across as a version of Super Furry Animals fronted by Axl Rose. The pop rock song "Plane Going Down" is preceded by the ballad "All My Life". "Dinosaur" is a pop-metal track that is followed by the
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-esque "Shoot Freak". "Keep It Heavy" apes the sound of the Smashing Pumpkins, specifically their album '' Gish'' (1991), and Marion.


Release

Gay Dad played their first show as a trio in November 2000, following the departure of Risebero. At this time, their upcoming album was scheduled for release in mid 2001. "Now Always and Forever" was released as a single on 19 March 2001. Two versions were released on CD: the first with "Estigon" and "God Has Moved On", while the second included "Surprise Party" and "Captains of Industry". In March and April 2001, the band went on a tour of the UK. "Harder Faster" was released as a single. The CD version featured "Without Sound", while the 7" vinyl version included a demo of "Nightclub". "Transmission" was released as a single; the 7" vinyl version included "Sailing By". Two versions were released on CD: the first with "Art Since 1978" and "Dead Man", while the second featured "The Aim of the Game" and "Young Heart Attack". ''Transmission'' was released in Japan, with the bonus track "Someone Like You", on 14 November 2001, through
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. ''Transmission'' was released in the United States on 23 April 2002, through Thirsty Ear Recordings. Shortly afterwards, Gay Dad disbanded.


Reception

''Transmission'' was met with mixed reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 52, based on five reviews. ''
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'' Rob Bolton considered ''Transmission'' "a much better rock record" than their debut release, full of "louder guitars and more hooks to please fans of the scene". Randy Harward of '' CMJ New Music Report'' noted that the album was a "12-pack of the same spacy-snotty-slick glam rock poured" onto the band's debut. He added that if the band's American label "works the hell out of this, it just might be a do-over for Gay Dad". ''
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'' contributor Bradley Bambarger said that after the opening song, "it's mostly downhill", akin to their "intermittently diverting but ultimately superior" debut. In a review for '' NME'', Mark Beaumont wrote that Jones' "birth could probably have been accused of style over content but it’s on ‘Transmission’ that his shallowness really shines". He added that the "ideology, big shiny guitars and o’er-vaulting ambition to be the Last Great Pop Stars are all proudly in yer face but the tunes – how can we put this? – verge too often on the bollocks." Ty Burr of '' Entertainment Weekly'' reviewed ''Transmission'' with two others albums; he simply commented that the band's "glam-Bowie reinventions, culminat midway in the pop-rock nuggetry of 'Plane Going Down' before crashing to earth". AllMusic reviewer Dean Carlson wrote that while it was "marginally stronger" than their debut album, it "forgets to bring along the same natural pop drive and offers more of the same well-honed faux iconic babble". '' Blender'' John Perry described the album as being "more Bon Jovi than Blur, bloated with stadium-friendly power ballads". Eric J. Iannelli for ''Ink 19'' said album "suffer from frivolous overproduction, in both musical and lyrical terms it is tediously bland". He added that " atever Gay Dad was aiming for, ''Transmission'' falls despairingly shy of the mark". "Now Always and Forever" reached number 41 in the UK, while "Transmission" peaked at number 58.


Track listing

All tracks written by Cliff Jones, Nicholas Crowe and Nigel Hoyle. #"Transmission" – 4:18 #"Now Always and Forever" – 4:17 #"Nightclub" – 3:12 #"Harder Faster" – 5:04 #"Plane Going Down" (Jones, James Riseboro, Crowe, Hoyle) – 5:42 #"All My Life" – 4:20 #"Breathe" (Jones, Riseboro, Crowe, Hoyle) – 5:40 #"Dinosaur" – 5:27 #"Shoot Freak" (Jones, Riseboro, Crowe, Hoyle) – 4:13 #"Keep It Heavy" (Jones, Riseboro, Crowe, Hoyle) – 3:51 #"Everything Changes" (Jones, Riseboro, Crowe, Hoyle) – 4:47 #"Promise of a Miracle" – 2:16


Personnel

Personnel per booklet. Gay Dad * Cliff Jones * Nicholas Crowe * Nigel Hoyle Additional musicians *
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– vocals (track 2) * James Riseboro – keyboards (tracks 5 and 11) * Brian Wright – cello (track 7) * The Ragged School – vocals (track 3) Production and design * Ben Chapman – producer * Gay Dad – producer * Roger Tebutt – recording (tracks 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10 and 11), additional recording (tracks 5, 8 and 11) * Fulton Dingley – additional recording (tracks 1), recording (tracks 3 and 8) * Mark Firth – recording (track 5) * Tom Elmhurst – recording (track 5) * Danton Supple – recording (track 11) * Stephen Harris – mixing * Geoff Pesche – mastering


References

{{Authority control 2001 albums B-Unique Records albums Gay Dad albums