Whitechocolatespaceegg: Difference between revisions
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* [[Liz Phair]] | * [[Liz Phair]] | ||
* [[Brad Wood]] | * [[Brad Wood]] | ||
| prev_title = [[ | | prev_title = [[Juvenilia (EP)|Juvenilia]] | ||
| prev_year = | | prev_year = 1995 | ||
| next_title = [[Liz Phair (album)|Liz Phair]] | | next_title = [[Liz Phair (album)|Liz Phair]] | ||
| next_year = 2003 | | next_year = 2003 | ||
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| name = Whitechocolatespaceegg | | name = Whitechocolatespaceegg | ||
| type = studio | | type = studio | ||
| single1 = | | single1 = Polyester Bride | ||
| single1date = 1998 | | single1date = 1998 | ||
| single2 = | | single2 = Johnny Feelgood | ||
| single2date = 1998 | | single2date = 1998 | ||
}} | }} | ||
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}}<!-- Automatically generated by DASHBot--> | }}<!-- Automatically generated by DASHBot--> | ||
'''''Whitechocolatespaceegg''''' is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter [[Liz Phair]], released in 1998. It peaked at number 35 on the [[Billboard 200|''Billboard'' 200]].<ref name="US">[{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r371984/charts-awards|pure_url=yes}} allmusic ((( whitechocolatespaceegg > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums )))<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> As of July 2010, the album had sold 293,000 copies.<ref>{{cite magazine|url= | '''''Whitechocolatespaceegg''''' is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter [[Liz Phair]], released in 1998. It peaked at number 35 on the [[Billboard 200|''Billboard'' 200]].<ref name="US">[{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r371984/charts-awards|pure_url=yes}} allmusic ((( whitechocolatespaceegg > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums )))<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> As of July 2010, the album had sold 293,000 copies.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.billboard.com/pro/ask-billboard-kylie-fever/|title=Ask Billboard: Kylie 'Fever' |magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]|date=2010-07-16|access-date=2012-02-17}}</ref> Unlike her previous two albums, with themes of sex and relationships, ''Whitechocolatespaceegg'' focused more on motherhood and family, as Phair had recently gotten married and given birth to a son. | ||
==Reception== | ==Reception== | ||
| Line 72: | Line 72: | ||
==Track listing== | ==Track listing== | ||
{{Track listing | {{Track listing | ||
| all_writing = [[Liz Phair]], except where noted | | all_writing = [[Liz Phair]], except where noted. | ||
| title1 = White Chocolate Space Egg | | title1 = White Chocolate Space Egg | ||
| writer1 = | | writer1 = {{hlist|Phair|Jason Chasko|Doug Stoley}} | ||
| length1 = 4:35 | | length1 = 4:35 | ||
| title2 = Big Tall Man | | title2 = Big Tall Man | ||
| writer2 = Phair | | writer2 = {{hlist|Phair|Chasko}} | ||
| length2 = 3:49 | | length2 = 3:49 | ||
| title3 = Perfect World | | title3 = Perfect World | ||
| length3 = 2:15 | | length3 = 2:15 | ||
| title4 = Johnny Feelgood | | title4 = Johnny Feelgood | ||
| length4 = 3:22 | | length4 = 3:22 | ||
| title5 = Polyester Bride | | title5 = Polyester Bride | ||
| length5 = 4:05 | | length5 = 4:05 | ||
| title6 = Love Is Nothing | | title6 = Love Is Nothing | ||
| length6 = 2:16 | | length6 = 2:16 | ||
| title7 = Baby Got Going | | title7 = Baby Got Going | ||
| writer7 = Phair | | writer7 = {{hlist|Phair|[[Scott Litt]]}} | ||
| length7 = 2:02 | | length7 = 2:02 | ||
| title8 = Uncle Alvarez | | title8 = Uncle Alvarez | ||
| length8 = 3:52 | | length8 = 3:52 | ||
| title9 = Only Son | | title9 = Only Son | ||
| length9 = 5:08 | | length9 = 5:08 | ||
| title10 = Go on Ahead | | title10 = Go on Ahead | ||
| length10 = 2:53 | | length10 = 2:53 | ||
| title11 = Headache | | title11 = Headache | ||
| length11 = 2:53 | | length11 = 2:53 | ||
| title12 = Ride | | title12 = Ride | ||
| length12 = 3:04 | | length12 = 3:04 | ||
| title13 = What Makes You Happy | | title13 = What Makes You Happy | ||
| length13 = 3:36 | | length13 = 3:36 | ||
| title14 = Fantasize | | title14 = Fantasize | ||
| length14 = 1:55 | | length14 = 1:55 | ||
| title15 = Shitloads of Money | | title15 = Shitloads of Money | ||
| length15 = 3:39 | | length15 = 3:39 | ||
| title16 = Girls' Room | | title16 = Girls' Room | ||
| length16 = 1:46 | | length16 = 1:46 | ||
| total_length = 51:10 | | total_length = 51:10 | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Track listing | {{Track listing | ||
| headline = Japan bonus track <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.oricon.co.jp/prof/177354/products/262823/1/ | title=ホワイトチョコレートスペースエッグ | リズ・フェア }}</ref> | | headline = Japan bonus track <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.oricon.co.jp/prof/177354/products/262823/1/ | title=ホワイトチョコレートスペースエッグ | リズ・フェア }}</ref> | ||
| title17 = Hurricane Cindy | | title17 = Hurricane Cindy | ||
| length17 = 2:54 | | length17 = 2:54 | ||
| total_length = 54:04 | | total_length = 54:04 | ||
}} | }} | ||
| Line 147: | Line 147: | ||
==Charts== | ==Charts== | ||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" | {| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center" | ||
! Chart (1998) | ! Chart (1998) | ||
! Peak<br />position | ! Peak<br />position | ||
Latest revision as of 04:49, 20 December 2025
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Whitechocolatespaceegg is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter Liz Phair, released in 1998. It peaked at number 35 on the Billboard 200.[1] As of July 2010, the album had sold 293,000 copies.[2] Unlike her previous two albums, with themes of sex and relationships, Whitechocolatespaceegg focused more on motherhood and family, as Phair had recently gotten married and given birth to a son.
Reception
The album received generally positive reviews. Rolling Stone called it "engagingly intimate" while at the same time "playful and pop-y, with just enough dry humor". The magazine also praised the album for its storytelling-esque lyrics.[3] The Washington Times wrote that Phair had successfully proved she was "no longer an unbridled twentysomething but now, at 31, a wife and mother, [who] has grown as an artist as well as a woman."[4]
Billboard praised the album, noting "droll in her truth-telling, devastating in her offhand insights, and dazzling in her homespun rock dominion, Liz Phair is arguably the most original talent of the decade, as Whitechocolatespaceegg powerfully reaffirms. For track-to-track subtlety, poignant wit, and no- bullshit pronouncements that carry real poetic weight, Phair is the backstairs bard without peer...Phair is a truly affecting songmaker. Moreover, she can take the pop vernacular in all its jukebox/folk-pop/dancefloor familiarity and make it subversive again on superb material like "Uncle Alvarez," "Only Son," "Ride," and "What Makes You Happy." [5]
Track listing
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Personnel
- Liz Phair – guitar, piano, vocals
- Leroy Bach – acoustic bass
- Scott Bennett – organ, bass guitar, drums
- Bill Berry – bongos
- Peter Buck – guitar
- Jason Chasko – bass, guitar, piano, drums, background vocals
- Nathan December – guitar, electric guitar
- Tommy Furar – bass
- John Hiler – organ, piano, keyboards, background vocals
- Scott Litt – acoustic guitar, bass, harmonica, violin, drums, keyboards, background vocals
- Scott McCaughey – guitar
- Mike Mills – bass
- Troy Niedhart – accordion
- Ed Tinley – guitar, clapping
- Randy Wilson – keyboards
- Brad Wood – organ, bass, guitar, drums, keyboards, background vocals, clapping, drum machine
Production
- Producers: Liz Phair, Jason Chasko, Scott Litt, Brad Wood
- Engineers: John Hiler, Liquid Grooves, Chris Sabold, David Schiffman, Ed Tinley, Brad Wood
- Assistant engineers: Victor Janacua, Matt Judah, Brad Kopplin, Julie Last, Chris Sabold, Al Sanderson, David Schiffman
- Mixing: Victor Janacua, Tom Lord-Alge, Brad Wood
- Mastering: Ted Jensen, Katrin Thomas
- Programming: John Hiler, Randy Wilson
- Loops: Liquid Grooves
- Treatments: Scott Litt
- Art direction: Liz Phair, Frank Longo, Jon Mathias, Mark O.
Charts
| Chart (1998) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200[1] | 35 |
| Canada Albums Chart[6] | 69 |
References
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- ↑ a b allmusic ((( whitechocolatespaceegg > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums )))
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- ↑ Liz Phair grows confident about music. (Arts) | Article from The Washington Times Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
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