Sinking the Eight Ball
Sinking the Eight Ball | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 23 September 1997 | |||
Genre | Psychobilly | |||
Label | Sub•Lime Records | |||
Producer | Mike Knott Gene Eugene | |||
Ruby Joe chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Cross Rhythms[1] | |
Cool Fools | |
The Lighthouse | |
Youthworker[2] | |
CCM Magazine[3] | |
7ball[4] | |
CBA Marketplace[5] |
Sinking the Eight Ball is the debut album by Ruby Joe. Due to its topical content, the album was pulled from some Christian book stores.[6]
The album drew upon the production talents of Mike Knott and Gene Eugene. On this release the band has a rockabilly sound, somewhere between the Stray Cats and The Reverend Horton Heat,[2] or "like a rockabilly version of Mike Knott..."[3] Lyrically the album addressed hard issues such as racism ("Skin"), the underground church in China ("People Underground"), materialism and temptation ("Fat Cat"), New Age spiritualism ("Rock 'n' Roll & My Baby"), and internal spiritual battles with our sinful nature.[2][3][6]
In "Spiritual Heroin" Russinger deals with his own former speed addiction,[2] describing how Christ can fill the need created by addictions, which one reviewer described as a "slightly disturbing metaphor."[1] The album also deals with the victims of the holocaust ("Death Train"),[4] and finally closes with "Let's Go", a "no holds barred celebration of salvation."[1]
One reviewer found the album to be on various tracks "cliché-ridden but vaguely worshipful", "weakly inspiring", and "shallow & dumb."[5] The reviewer went on to state that the attempt "to bring 1950s wholesomeness into today's moral morass" fell flat.[5]
Track listing
[edit]- "Skin"
- "Within"
- "Childhood Love Song"
- "Death Train"
- "Fat Cat"
- "Rock 'N' Roll and My Baby"
- "Spiritual Heroin"
- "Rocket Ship"
- "Studio, No. 5"
- "People Underground"
- "Tongue Is Numb"
- "Let's Go"
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Rimmer, Mike (June 1998). "Ruby Joe – Sinking The Eight Ball". Cross Rhythms (45).
- ^ a b c d Menke, Jimmy (May–June 1998). "Tools / Music". YouthWorker Journal. XVI (5): 69–70.
- ^ a b c Jeffrey, Anthony (March 1998). "Reviews / Sinking the Eight Ball". CCM Magazine. 20 (9): 78.
- ^ a b Koss, "Boss" Vic (November–December 1997). "Reviews: Sinking the Eight Ball". 7ball (15): 54. ISSN 1082-3980.
- ^ a b c Hassig, Gary (February 1998). "Sinking the Eight Ball Review". CBA Marketplace. 31 (2): 72–73. ISSN 1092-7239. OCLC 36184061.
- ^ a b Thompson, John J. (September–October 1998). "bankshots: Ruby Joe". 7ball (20): 46. ISSN 1082-3980.