Exile on Coldharbour Lane
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{More citations needed|date=May 2021}}
{{Infobox album
| name = Exile on Coldharbour Lane
| type = studio
| artist = Alabama 3
| cover = Exile on coldharbour lane a3.PNG
| alt =
| released = 11 November 1997
| recorded = March 1997 – June 1997
| venue =
| studio = {{unbulleted list|Dairy, Brixton, London, England|Steamrooms, London, England}}
| genre = *Blues
| length = 60:47
| label = One Little Indian, Geffen
| producer = Matthew Vaughan
| prev_title =
| prev_year =
| next_title = La Peste
| next_year = 2000
}}
Exile on Coldharbour Lane is the debut album by Alabama 3, released on 11 November 1997 on One Little Indian and Geffen. The name and cover are references to Exile on Main St. by The Rolling Stones and Coldharbour Lane a major street in Brixton, South London best known for containing several after-hours clubs and not a few drug dealers.{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/britain/article/0,,1468736,00.html | title=Brixton: Ghetto fabulous | quote=dealers hassle you as soon as you turn left from the station, mithering until the corner of Coldharbour Lane and beyond. |newspaper=The Guardian | location=London | date=April 24, 2005 | access-date=May 2, 2010}} Recording sessions took place from March to June 1997. Exile on Coldharbour Lane did not chart on any album charts in the United States. The song "Sister Rosetta" was featured in the film Barnyard. "Woke Up This Morning" is best known as the opening theme music for the television series, The Sopranos, which used the "Chosen One Mix" of that song. "Woke Up This Morning" was later sampled by Nas on "Got Ur Self A..." from the album Stillmatic.
Reception
{{Music ratings
| rev1 = AllMusic
| rev1score = {{Rating|4|5}}{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r318193|first=Ned|last=Raggett}}
| rev2 = Pitchfork
| rev3 = Uncut
| rev3Score = {{Rating|4|5}}{{Cite magazine |last=Williamson |first=Nigel |author-link=Nigel Williamson |date=February 1998 |title=Alabama Three: Exile on Coldharbour Lane |magazine=Uncut |page=82 |issue=9}}
| noprose = yes
}}
Upon its release, Exile on Coldharbour Lane received favorable reviews, including an 8.9 review from Pitchfork Media. A review in Cherwell said there were "many highlights on this bizarre journey of an album", praising 'Ain't Going To Goa' and 'Mao Tse Tung Said' but describing 'Purple Tin' as "awful [...] pure bar room schmaltz".{{cite news |author1=Guy Marks|title=Speed of Sound: Alabama 3 - Exit on Coldharbour Lane|work=Cherwell |volume=219 |issue=7 |date=21 November 1997 |page=12}}
In a 2008 article in The Guardian, Irvine Welsh said the techno and country and western fusion was "astonishingly bold" and called it an "incendiary debut album".{{cite web |author1=Irvine Welsh |author1-link=Irvine Welsh |title='We're amazed we're still alive' |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2008/apr/21/urban.popandrock |website=The Guardian |access-date=23 November 2023 |date=21 April 2008}}
Track listing
{{track listing
| headline = Exile on Coldharbour Lane track listing
| title1 = Converted
| length1 = 6:15
| writer1 = Jake Black, Simon Edwards, Orlando Harrison, Rob Spragg, Brian O'Horain
| title2 = Speed of the Sound of Loneliness
| length2 = 5:57
| writer2 = John Prine
| title3 = Woke Up This Morning
| length3 = 5:16
| writer3 = Black, Edwards, Spragg, Piers Marsh, Chester Burnett
| title4 = U Don't Dans 2 Tekno Anymore
| length4 = 3:37
| writer4 = Black, Edwards, Spragg, Marsh, Harrison, O'Horain
| title5 = Bourgeoisie Blues
| length5 = 4:47
| writer5 = Edwards, Spragg, Marsh
| title6 = Ain't Goin' to Goa
| length6 = 3:55
| writer6 = Black, Edwards, Spragg, Marsh
| title7 = Mao Tse Tung Said
| length7 = 3:23
| writer7 = Black, Edwards, Spragg, Marsh, John Delafons
| title8 = Hypo Full of Love (The 12-Step Plan)
| length8 = 6:25
| writer8 = Black,
| title9 = The Old Purple Tin (9% of Pure Heaven)
| length9 = 4:05
| writer9 = Black, Robert "Hacker" Jessett
| title10 = The Night We Nearly Got Busted
| length10 = 4:37
| writer10 = Edwards, Spragg, Marsh, Harrison
| title11 = Sister Rosetta
| length11 = 6:43
| writer11 = Edwards, Spragg, Marsh, Harrison, Robert Bailey
| title12 = Peace in the Valley
| length12 = 5:47
| writer12 = Marsh, Spragg, Errol Thompson, Gian Mario Tonin
| total_length = 60:47
}}
Personnel
Alabama 3
- Larry Love (Rob Spragg) – vocals
- The Very Reverend Dr. D. Wayne Love (First Minister of the First Presleyterian Church of Elvis the Divine (UK)) (Jake Black) – vocals
- The Mountain of Love (Piers Marsh) – analogue terrorism, harmonica, jaw's harp & vocals
- Sir Real "Congaman" Love L.S.D. O.P.T. (Simon Edwards) – percussion, acoustic guitar
- Mississippi Guitar Love – guitar
- L.B. Dope (Johnny Delafons) – drums
- The Spirit (Orlando Harrison) – keyboards
- The Book of Love (Security), I.V. Lenin (Socialism in the Mainline), Lady Love and Little Eye Tie – D. Wayne's Ladies
Technical
- Produced by The Ministers at Work and Boss Hogg
- Engineered by John Wilkinson at The Steamroom and The Dairy
- Mixed by Andy Wallace at The Town House
- Track 3 contains an element of "Tell Me" performed by Howlin Wolf, a sample from "Standing at the Burying Ground" by Mississippi Fred McDowell and a sample from "Mannish Boy" by Muddy Waters.
- Track 8 contains elements from "Honey Hush" performed by Johnny Burnett & The Rock 'n' Roll Trio.
- Track 11 contains samples from "Oh in That Morning" by The Reverend BC Campbell and "Wrapped Up and Tangled Up" by The Reverend Charlie Jackson.
Notes
- "Woke Up This Morning" is well known as the opening theme music for the HBO drama series The Sopranos, although the mix used for the show is different from the one on this album. This version is called Chosen One Mix.
- "Mao Tse Tung Said" features a lengthy sample from the cult leader Jim Jones.
- The second track is a cover version of John Prine's "Speed of the Sound of Loneliness".
- "The Old Purple Tin (9% of Pure Heaven)" is about Tennent's Super, a 9% a.b.v. Scottish beer that comes in a purple can, which makes its consumers appear purple when aged and weathered, and thus deserves its reputation for being the drink of choice of the vagrant.
- "Ain't Goin' to Goa" features the Reverend D. Wayne Love's description of A3's style: "sweet, pretty, country acid house music."
Charts
class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ Chart performance for Exile on Coldharbour Lane ! scope="col"| Chart (1997) ! scope="col"| Peak |
{{album chart|UKIndependent|12|date=19971123|rowheader=true|access-date=19 October 2023}} |
References
{{reflist}}