I Should Coco

I Should Coco

Infobox Album
Name = I Should Coco
Type = Album
Artist = Supergrass



Released = 15 May 1995
Recorded = start date|1994|2 - end date|1994|8 at Sawmills Studio, Cornwall
Genre = Britpop
Length = 40:18
Label = Parlophone
Producer = Sam Williams
Reviews =
* Allmusic rating|4.5|5 [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:2c8o1vkozzza~T00 link]
* BBC (Positive) [http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/release/wn9x/ link]
* "Entertainment Weekly" (A) [http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,297986,00.html link]
* "Rolling Stone" (Favourable) [http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/supergrass/albums/album/105841/review/5942067/i_should_coco link] |
Last album = —
This album = "I Should Coco"
(1995)
Next album = "In It for the Money"
(1997)
Misc = Singles
Name = I Should Coco
Type = Album
Single 1 = Caught By The Fuzz
Single 1 date = 24 October 1994
Single 2 = Mansize Rooster
Single 2 date = 13 February 1995
Single 3 = Lose It
Single 3 date = March 1995
Single 4 = Lenny
Single 4 date = 1 May 1995
Single 5 = Alright/Time
Single 5 date = 3 July 1995
Extra album cover 2
Upper Caption = Alternate Cover


Lower Caption = The Limited Edition 7"

"I Should Coco" is the debut studio album by English alternative rock band Supergrass. It was released through Parlophone on 15 May 1995 in the United Kingdom. They released their debut single from the album, "Caught by the Fuzz", in May 1995 on the small independent local label Backbeat Records. At the height of the Britpop era, the album set Supergrass apart from the numerous other bands releasing albums at the time, which were seen to be influenced by Britpop's biggest bands, Blur and Oasis. "I Should Coco" became the band's most successful release when it reached number one on the UK Albums Chart.

Recording and Production

Supergrass formed in 1993 after the breakup of The Jennifers and consists of Gaz Coombes (lead vocals), Danny Goffey (drums), Mick Quinn (bass), and Rob Coombes (keyboards). Gaz Coombes, Goffey, and Quinn had been playing gigs around Oxford when they were spotted by producer Sam Williams, who said he wanted to work with them. During the summer of 1993 the band recorded a six track demo at Sawmills Studio and, having signed a deal with Backbeat Records, a limited number of copies of "Caught by the Fuzz" and "Mansize Rooster" were released. The demo had also quickly reached EMI, however, and that led to the group being signed by the Parlophone label, which would re-release the two songs. Quinn said "it took about three and a half months total recording time and cost less to make than the video for Alright." [cite web
last = Quinn
first = Mick
authorlink = Mick Quinn
title = I Should Coco
publisher = Children of the Monkey Basket
date =
url = http://www.childrenofthemonkeybasket.com/discography/discomain.htm
accessdate = 2008-06-16
]

A recording made at Carfax Tower in Oxford provided the bell chimes heard at the end of "Strange Ones". [cite web | last = Quinn | first = Mick | authorlink = Mick Quinn | title = Oxford - The Apollo Theatre | publisher = Children of the Monkey Basket | date = | url = http://www.childrenofthemonkeybasket.com/diarynew1/oxford/D11.htm | accessdate = 2008-06-17] These chimes were only heard on the "I Should Coco" version, not on "Supergrass Is 10", because on the "I Should Coco" album the chimes are used as a transition to the next track, "Sitting Up Straight", which was not included in "Supergrass Is 10". "Strange Ones" was written about Cowley Road, Oxford, [cite news | last = Hughes | first = Tim | title = Supergrass put on super show | publisher = "Oxford Mail" | publication-date = 2007-12-21 | url = http://www.oxfordmail.net/whatson/musics/musicreviews/display.var.1923246.0.supergrass_put_on_super_show.php | accessdate = 2008-06-18] a place where the band once lived. It was originally intended to be the "throwaway song" on the B-side to "Caught by the Fuzz". Another song on the album with the same theme, "I'd Like To Know", was inspired by listening to "Strange Ones" played backwards on tape cassette. Supergrass took this sound, wrote new lyrics for it, and had another song for their album. [Citation | last=Robinson | first=John | author-link=John Robinson | title=Little Cred Roosters | publisher=IPC Media | periodical=NME | volume= | issue= | pages= | year=1995 | publication-date=18 February 1995 | url=http://www.strangeones.co.uk/press/articles/mn950218.htm | accessdate =2008-06-19] Gaz Coombes says, "One of the highlights of this album was recording 'Sofa (Of My Lethargy)'. ... I remember everybody got in the live room and had an instrument, including Sam [Williams] on bass, a friend of his on hammond organ and we played the rest, all live, one take. ... We made "I Should Coco" so fast because we wanted to catch the energy and excitement of the songs on tape, and do it before the money ran out!" ["Supergrass Is 10" album booklet] In a 2005 interview with BBC Radio London Quinn remembered "writing that song ['Time'] in my living room on a rainy day and Gaz sort of turned up with this chord sequence and we just went straight through it and just did it on 4 track". [cite web| url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/entertainment/music/supergrass_interview.shtml| title=Supergrass live on BBC London - Part one (8', 53")| publisher=BBC Radio London| date=2002| accessdate=2008-06-18]

Packaging

Supergrass have stated that the album title has no particular meaning; however, in Cockney rhyming slang "I should coco" (or "I should cocoa!") can be interpreted to mean "I should say so", [cite web|url=http://www.strangeones.co.uk/faq/index.htm#12 |title=What does "I Should Coco" mean?|publisher=The Strange Ones|accessdate=May 2008] a sarcastic exclamation of disbelief or anger. [cite web|url=http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-ish1.htm |title=I Should Cocoa|publisher=World Wide Words|accessdate=May 2008] In an interview, drummer Danny Goffey implied that the album was named with the rhyming slang in mind. [cite web|url=http://www.beale.plus.com/Ishudko/|title=Ishudko|publisher=beale.plus.com|accessdate=May 2008] There is also a café on Oxford's Cowley Road, an area the group used to frequent, called Café Coco, [cite web|url=http://www.oxfordrestaurantguide.co.uk/cafe_coco/|title=Cafe Coco|publisher=.Oxford Restaurant Guide ] and this may also have influenced the album's title. [cite web|url=http://www.virginradio.co.uk/music/artists/supergrass/biography/2.html|title=Supergrass Biography|publisher=Virgin Radio ] [cite web|last=Poole|first=Lawrence|title=The men and woman behind the Monkeys|publisher="Manchester Evening News"|date=2007-07-27|url=http://blogs.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/whatson/2007/07/the_men_and_woman_behind_the_m.html|accessdate=2008-06-18]

The front cover of the album is a painting based on three separate photos of Gaz, Danny, and Mick. The portraits of Gaz & Danny were taken by Mick in the summer of 1994 when he was experimenting with a macro lens. The photo of Mick was taken that same year by a friend, while they were on tour in Wolverhampton. The painting was then created by the Moody Painters who were based on Oxford's Cowley Road. The white band at the top was inspired by an old Donovan record that Mick owned and is an homage to old 1950s and 1960s records, with the stereo-mono signs. The photo on the back of the album was taken at a club inLondon about five minutes after they came off stage. The photo actually consists of two separate shots because, as Mick explains it, "I was pulling a disgusting face in the original so we grafted my head onto this one from a nearly identical shot from the same session." [cite web| url= http://www.childrenofthemonkeybasket.com/artwork/coco/index.html| title=I Should Coco Artwork| publisher=Children of the Monkey Basket| accessdate=2008-06-13] All of these elements were then put together by Nick Bax of The Designers Republic to create the finished sleeve. The Bonus 7" featured a more kaleidoscope-style front cover.

Music

The group's primary musical influences came from bands such as Buzzcocks, T.Rex, The Jam, and The Kinks. Blur and Oasis were also inspirations to many Britpop bands of the 1990s. Supergrass took this contemporary music and mixed it with pop-punk's characteristic fast, three-chord, guitar-based, catchy tunes to produce a sound uniquely their own; "we were just the three of us in my bedroom or someone's house, just making ... we played really hard and just made loads of noise. Most of our early songs were just three chord grooves and stuff that was fun to play. So that's why the first album sounded so 'punky', I think ... it's just 'cause we were all used to playing in this small room and it being really loud, so we just made the album sound like that." [ [http://www.furious.com/PERFECT/supergrass.html Supergrass- interview and show review ] ] [cite web| url= http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/supergrass| title=Beyond: Supergrass| publisher= "Rolling Stone" | accessdate=2008-06-17] "Songs for Beginners" by Graham Nash was another possible influence on "I Should Coco". Gaz told The Guardian in 2003, "We used to listen to it a lot when we lived in Cowley Road in Oxford in 1994, just when the band were getting big." [cite web|last=Hodgkinson|first=Will|title=Pumping on my stereo|publisher="The Guardian"|date=2003-08-01|url=http://arts.guardian.co.uk/homeentertainment/story/0,12830,1009681,00.html|accessdate=2008-06-18]

The musical styles and their particular inspirations for the songs on this album were extremely diverse. For example, there is the cheerful, fast, keyboard-augmented "I'd Like To Know", the guitar-driven punk narrative "Caught by the Fuzz", the mainly piano-based rhythm of the teen anthem "Alright", and the country music-influenced acoustic guitar in "Time to Go". Even in the varied genre of Britpop, "I Should Coco" was seen as eclectic. Overall, the album has been described as Britpop, influenced in equal parts by Buzzcocks and The Kinks, with strong hints of Supertramp in "She's So Loose", "Lose It" and the intro of "Strange Ones". [cite web| url= http://www.themodernmusic.com/2006/03/supergrass-i-should-coco.html| title=Supergrass - I Should Coco| publisher= Modern Music | accessdate=2008-06-16]

In a 1995 interview with the Metro, Mick Quinn said, "We listen to a lot of different kinds of music. We're "not" a '60s-revival band! We like things from the '70s and beyond as well; everything from Sly and the Family Stone and Motown to Frank Black and Tricky." [cite web|last=Baxter|first=Nicky|title=Supergrass borrows from '60s hippie music and '70s soul|publisher="Metro"|date=1995-11-22|url=http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/11.16.95/supergrass-9546.html|accessdate=2008-06-16]

"Strange Ones" and "I'd Like To Know" are both songs about the strange people on Cowley Road, Oxford. Mick Quinn tried to describe the concept: "There's a few people who are just really out there. There's a lot of people around Oxford who are real spliffheads and that, who go and lie down in Port Meadow, but I'm not really sure about them. I'm not really sure that they're individuals: they're part of a much larger thing." Danny Goffey added, "They're the sort of people who don't fit in anywhere, who don't link up with everyday life at all." [ [http://www.strangeones.co.uk/press/articles/mn950218.htm The Strange Ones Supergrass Site ] ]

"Caught by the Fuzz" was based on a real-life event: lead singer Gaz Coombes' arrest for possession of cannabis at age fifteen. [cite episode
title = Going Underground 476
series = Going Underground on Gouwestad Radio
serieslink =
airdate = 2008-07-11
season =
number = 476
]

It wasn't trying to be a real statement, but at the time we knew that it was a big deal. Kids all around England were getting nicked for having a bit of hash on them. In Oxford that kind of thing happened quite a lot. It's all true so it was easy to write. It was a funny experience - not too funny at the time 'cause I was only 15 and shitting myself. The song has that disturbing energy. It's comparable to your heart racing. The adrenaline rush you get when your mum walks into the police station is similar to the energy of the song. [Citation|last=Collins|first=Robert|publication-date=May, 2004|title=Still On The Buzz!|periodical=Play Music|accessdate=2008-06-20]

—Gaz Coombes, "Supergrass"

"Mansize Rooster" is said to be about a young boy with a large penis, although this is not obvious from the lyrics. [Citation
last= Maconie
first= Stuart
author-link= Stuart Maconie
title= Hey! Hey! We're The Cheeky Monkeys!
newspaper= Q Magazine
volume=
issue=
pages=
year= October 1995
url= http://www.strangeones.co.uk/press/articles/mq951000.htm
] Gaz Coombes once stated in an interview that "the most embarrassing moment in pop is on our album where it goes: 'Oi Mum! Got any mandies?'" [Citation
last= Parkes
first= Taylor
author-link= Taylor Parkes
title= Coco Pop
newspaper= Melody Maker
volume=
issue=
pages=
date= 20th May 1995
url= http://www.strangeones.co.uk/press/articles/mm950520.htm
] This was one of the many exclamations made between tracks on "I Should Coco" in the sped-up voices of the band members. It was said before the song "We're Not Supposed To" began.

Release and Reception

"I Should Coco" reached number one on the UK Albums Chart, [cite web| url= http://www.strangeones.co.uk/music/78_01.htm| title=The Albums - I Should Coco| publisher=The Strange Ones| accessdate=2008-06-12] stayed there for three weeks, [cite web|url=http://www.everyhit.com/numberalb5.html|title=Number 1 Albums - 1990s|publisher=Every Hit] and still remains the only number one album Supergrass has ever achieved. It sold 500,000 copies domestically, earning Platinum status in the UK, and has sold 990,000 copies worldwide. [cite web|url=http://www.strangeones.co.uk/press/articles/md970000.htm|title=Second LP features a more mature sound|publisher=Dot Music] [cite web| url= http://www.bpi.co.uk/platinum/platinumright.asp?rq=search_plat&r_id=20566| title=I Should Coco Certified Awards| publisher=British Phonographic Industry| accessdate=2008-06-12] "NME" writer Steve Sutherland gave the album a nine-out-of-ten rating. He wrote, "They play with the skill and assurance of a band who've been going for decades yet they still burn off the buzz of being new to the game." He added, "There's nothing contrived about "I Should Coco", nothing added for effect." [Citation|last=Sutherland|first=Steve|publication-date=13 May, 1995|title=I Should Coco review|periodical=NME|accessdate=2008-06-18]

Culturally, the album's glorification of teenage freedom made a very big impact on the overall Britpop music scene. The whole genre was seen as the voice of youth, but Supergrass, still teens themselves when the album was made, addressed the subject with more insight than most. The most well-known song from the album, "Alright", is still played regularly in Britain and Ireland, and held up as a musical example of teenage rebellion. Though it is one of their most popular songs, the band rarely play "Alright" in their live sets anymore, not because they dislike it, but because it would be wrong for a band whose members are now all in their 30s to sing a song of such youthful exuberance. In a 1999 interview, Gaz Coombes joked, "We don't play 'Alright' anymore. We should play it in a minor key, and in the past tense." [1999 interview with Johnathan Cohen from [http://www.nudeasthenews.com/interviews/43 nudeasthenews.com] ] Around the time of its release Coombes said that "it wasn't written as an anthem. It isn't supposed to be a rally cry for our generation. The stuff about '"We are young/We run green..."' isn't about being 19 but really 13 or 14 and just discovering girls and drinking. It's meant to be light-hearted and a bit of a laugh, not at all a rebellious call to arms." Danny Goffey noted, "It certainly wasn't written in a very summery vibe. It was written in a cottage where the heating had packed up and we were trying to build fires to keep warm."cite web| url= http://www.strangeones.co.uk/press/articles/mq951000.htm| title=Hey! Hey! We're The Cheeky Monkeys!| publisher="Q Magazine" October 1995| accessdate=2008-06-16]

All five singles released from "I Should Coco" were well received by the British public. The first single from the album, "Caught by the Fuzz", peaked at number 43 on the UK Singles Chart.UKChartHits|151] The second single from the album, "Mansize Rooster", was played as Supergrass' first live television performance on "The Word" in 1995, and reached number 20 on the UK Singles Chart. "Lose It", officially the third single taken from the album, was a vinyl-only US release from Sub Pop records. [cite web| url= http://www.supergrass.tv/discography/CDloseit.php| title=Supergrass Discography: Lose It | publisher=Supergrass.tv| accessdate=2008-06-17] "Lenny" was the fourth single from "I Should Coco"; it reached number 10 on the UK Singles Chart, and remained there for three weeks. The final release from the album, "Alright/Time", proved to be their breakthrough single, largely due to the popularity of the song "Alright". Supergrass' highest ranked single to date, along with "Richard III", "Alright" reached number 2 on the UK Singles Chart, remained in the top three for a month, and still receives airplay in the UK. [There is also a sixth single from the album "sofa (on my lethargy)" but it is unknown where the song charted.cite web| url= http://www.strangeones.co.uk/music/45_04.htm| title=The Singles - Alright/Time| publisher=The Strange Ones| accessdate=2008-06-13] [cite web| url= http://www.music-city.org/Supergrass/biography/| title=Supergrass biography: beginnings, career, success| publisher=Music City| accessdate=2008-06-13] To date, 'I Should Coco' is the only Supergrass album that has made any impact on the United States: at the peak of the album's popularity, MTV included the videos of "Caught by the Fuzz" and "Alright" in their rotation. [cite web|url=http://www.mtv.com/music/artist/supergrass/artist.jhtml|title=Supergrass: Full biography|publisher=MTV|accessdate=2008-06-17] "I Should Coco" was nominated for Best Album at the 1995 Mercury Prize awards, and the single "Alright" from the album won an Ivor Novello Award for Best Contemporary Song. [cite web |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/guides/456900/456975/html/nn1page5.stm |title=Highs and Lows of the Mercury Music Prize - 1995 |publisher=BBC Online |accessdate=2008-06-12 ] cite web |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/suffolk/entertainment/music/V2002/v2002_supergrass.shtml |title=Award winning Supergrass |publisher=BBC Suffolk |accessdate=2008-06-13 ] The album was included in the book "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die". [cite web|url=http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/steveparker/1001albums.htm|title=1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die|publisher=Rocklist Music]

In a 2005 interview with The Times Gaz said, "It’s insane that people think we would ever sound like that again ... We’re proud of 'Alright' and how well it did, but we never wanted to find a formula and stick to it. Our aim was always to progress and keep the music interesting, for us and for the fans. So the people who see us in the street and still shout ‘We are young’ may not like the new album, but fans who have grown up with us and know to expect change probably will." [cite web|last=Verrico|first=Lisa|title='Grass get greener|publisher="The Times"|date=2003-08-13|url=http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/whats_on/listings/article553445.ece|accessdate=2008-06-16]

Track listing

tracklist
total_length = 40:18

all_writing = Supergrass

writing_credits =
lyrics_credits =
music_credits =

title1 = I'd Like To Know
length1 = 4:02

title2 = Caught By The Fuzz
length2 = 2:16

title3 = Mansize Rooster
length3 = 2:34

title4 = Alright
length4 = 3:01

title5 = Lose It
length5 = 2:37

title6 = Lenny
length6 = 2:42

title7 = Strange Ones
length7 = 4:19

title8 = Sitting Up Straight
length8 = 2:20

title9 = She's So Loose
length9 = 2:59

title10 = We're Not Supposed To
length10 = 2:04

title11 = Time
length11 = 3:10

title12 = Sofa (of My Lethargy)
length12 = 6:18

title13 = Time To Go
length13 = 1:56

tracklist
headline = Limited Edition Bonus 7"
total_length = 08:15

writing_credits = yes

title1 = Stone Free
note1 = This was a cover version of the Jimi Hendrix song of the same name.
writer1 = Jimi Hendrix
length1 = 3:10

title2 = Odd?
note2 = Peel Session
writer2 = Supergrass
length2 = 5:05

Personnel

;Supergrass
* Gaz Coombesvocals, guitar
* Danny Goffeydrums, backing vocals
* Mick Quinnbass guitar, backing vocals
* Rob Coombeskeyboards

;Production
* Sam Williams – record producer
* John Cornfieldengineering
* The Moody Painters – artwork (illustration)
* The Designer's Republic – artwork (sleeve)
* Paul Stanley – photography

Awards

References

External links

* [http://www.last.fm/music/Supergrass/I+Should+Coco I Should Coco] at Last.fm
* [http://www.strangeones.co.uk/music/78_01.htm I Should Coco] at The Strange Ones
* [http://www.childrenofthemonkeybasket.com/artwork/coco/index.html I Should Coco Artwork]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9nY9axjaWo "Alright" music video] at YouTube

succession box
before = "These Days" by Bon Jovi
title = UK number one album
years = 29 July 1995 – 18 August 1995
after = "It's Great When You're Straight... Yeah"
by Black Grape


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