Nurse (album)

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2021}}

{{Use British English|date=April 2013}}

{{Infobox album

| name = Nurse

| type = studio

| artist = Therapy?

| cover = TherapyNurse.jpg

| alt =

| released = 2 November 1992 (UK){{cite magazine|title=New Releases: Albums|magazine=Music Week|page=12|date=31 October 1992}}
12 January 1993 (US)

| recorded = 5–7 August 1992 at The Barn, Annamoe, Ireland (track 7); August 1992 at Loco Studio, Caerleon, Wales

| venue =

| studio =

| genre =

| length = 40:28
48:40 (JPN)

| label = A&M

| producer = Harvey Birrell

| prev_title = Caucasian Psychosis

| prev_year = 1992

| next_title = Born in a Crash

| next_year = 1993

| misc = {{singles

| name = Nurse

| type = studio

| single1 = Teethgrinder

| single1date = 19 October 1992

}}

}}

{{Album reviews

|rev1 = AllMusic

|rev1score = {{Rating|3|5}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/nurse-mw0000092909|title=Nurse – Therapy? | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic|via=allmusic.com}}

|rev2 = Robert Christgau

|rev2score = {{Rating-Christgau|hm3}}{{cite web|last=Christgau |first=Robert |url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?id=1522 |title = Therapy? |publisher= Robert Christgau|date = |accessdate= }}

|rev3 = The Encyclopedia of Popular Music

|rev3score = {{rating|3|5}}{{cite book |last1=Larkin |first1=Colin |title=The Encyclopedia of Popular Music |date=2006 |publisher=MUZE |volume=8 |page=118}}

|rev4 = Entertainment Weekly

|rev4score = C{{Cite web|url=https://ew.com/article/1993/01/15/nurse/|title=Nurse|website=EW.com}}

|rev5 = MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide

|rev5score = {{rating|2.5|5}}{{cite book |title=MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide |date=1999 |publisher=Visible Ink Press |page=1138}}

}}

Nurse is the first major label album released by the rock band Therapy?{{Cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/therapy-mn0000925636/biography|title=Therapy? | Biography & History|website=AllMusic}}{{ cite web | url=http://www.therapyquestionmark.co.uk/audio/nurse | title=Official Discography}} It was released in 1992 on A&M Records.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Fie47qSuTsoC&q=Nurse+album+therapy%3F+rough+guide+to+rock&pg=PA2102|title=The Rough Guide to Rock|date=4 February 2003|publisher=Rough Guides|isbn=978-1-85828-457-6|via=Google Books}}

Background

The album was written in a farm house in County Carlow, Ireland.{{Cite web|url=https://www.kerrang.com/features/15-things-you-probably-didnt-know-about-therapy/|title=15 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Therapy?|website=Kerrang!|date=21 September 2020 }} It was mainly recorded at Loco Studio in Caerleon, Wales, apart from "Gone" which was recorded in Annamoe, Ireland.{{cite web | url=http://www.therapyquestionmark.co.uk/about-us/ | title=Band Biography (1992) by Andy Cairns | url-status=dead | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304101644/http://www.therapyquestionmark.co.uk/about-us/ | archivedate=4 March 2016 | df=dmy-all }} The album was rated favourably by critics and reached number 38 in the UK Albums Chart.{{cite web | url=http://www.everyhit.com | title=UK Chart History}}

Releases

The album was released on 12" vinyl, CD and cassette. In the US, the album was released on limited edition red 12" vinyl, CD and cassette.

A remastered CD version of the album by the original producer, Harvey Birrell, was included in The Gemil Box, released on 18 November 2013.

The original master of the album was used for a 'Music on Vinyl' audiophile re-issue, released on mixed red and gold 180g vinyl on 22 February 2016, limited to 1000 numbered copies{{cite web | url=http://www.musiconvinyl.com/catalog/therapy/nurse#.WHPC3NKLTcs | title=Nurse LP re-issue}} It was also released on standard black vinyl release.

The first vinyl reissue featuring the 2013 remaster was released by Caroline Records on 12 June 2021 for Record Store Day in the UK and Ireland, on red vinyl and limited to 800 copies.

Furthermore, the album was reissued on 26 November 2021 by Caroline Records featuring the 2013 remaster on black vinyl and 2CD format. The CD version contains an extra disc of b-sides and previously unreleased demos.

Critical reception

The Encyclopedia of Popular Music wrote that the album "featured more complex arrangements and themes than the punk-descended speed burn-outs of earlier releases." Trouser Press called the album an "unforgettable bomb blast of a record [that] fine-tunes the atmosphere of the first two EPs by adding a little more crunch to the low end."{{cite web |title=Therapy? |url=https://trouserpress.com/reviews/therapy/ |website=Trouser Press |access-date=4 February 2021}}

Track listing

{{Tracklist

| total_length = 40:28

| title_width = 740px

| all_writing = Therapy?

| title1 = Nausea

| length1 = 3:56

| title2 = Teethgrinder

| length2 = 3:26

| title3 = Disgracelands

| length3 = 3:42

| title4 = Accelerator

| length4 = 2:15

| title5 = Neck Freak

| length5 = 5:51

| title6 = Perversonality

| length6 = 3:52

| title7 = Gone

| length7 = 6:23

| title8 = Zipless

| length8 = 2:53

| title9 = Deep Sleep

| length9 = 5:14

| title10 = Hypermania

| length10 = 2:48

}}

{{track listing

| headline = Japanese release bonus tracks

| title11 = Summer of Hate

| length11 = 2:29

| title12 = Human Mechanism

| length12 = 3:31

| title13 = Sky High McKay (E)

| length13 = 2:13

| total_length = 48:40

}}

{{Track listing

| headline = 2021 Reissue Disc 2

| total_length = 59:59

| title1 = Summer of Hate

| note1 = "Teethgrinder" single

| length1 = 2:32

| title2 = Human Mechanism

| note2 = "Teethgrinder" single

| length2 = 3:32

| title3 = Sky High McKay (E)

| note3 = "Teethgrinder" single

| length3 = 2:14

| title4 = Teethgrinder

| note4 = "Teethgrinder" single - Unsane Mix

| length4 = 6:33

| title5 = Teethgrinder

| note5 = "Teethgrinder" single - Tee Hee Dub Mix

| length5 = 4:24

| title6 = Nausea

| note6 = 1992 demo

| length6 = 3:26

| title7 = Teethgrinder

| note7 = 1992 demo

| length7 = 3:30

| title8 = Disgracelands

| note8 = 1992 demo

| length8 = 3:36

| title9 = Zipless

| note9 = 1992 demo

| length9 = 2:59

| title10 = Human Mechanism

| note10 = 1992 demo

| length10 = 3:19

| title11 = Accelerator

| note11 = 1992 demo

| length11 = 2:14

| title12 = Deep Sleep

| note12 = 1992 demo

| length12 = 4:36

| title13 = Hypermania

| note13 = 1992 demo

| length13 = 2:41

| title14 = Sky High McKay (E)

| note14 = 1992 demo

| length14 = 2:14

| title15 = Nausea

| note15 = Live from the Studio Floor

| length15 = 4:04

| title16 = Summer of Hate

| note16 = Live from the Studio Floor

| length16 = 2:40

| title17 = Neck Freak

| note17 = Live from the Studio Floor

| length17 = 5:33

}}

Personnel

;Therapy?

with:

  • David James – cello on "Gone"

;Technical

  • Harvey Birrell – producer, live sound, samples
  • Nick Atkins – engineer
  • Andrew Catlin – photography
  • Jeremy Pearce – design
  • Simon Carrington – design

Singles

  • "Teethgrinder" was released on 19 October 1992 on CD and 12" with "Summer of Hate", "Human Mechanism" and "Sky High McKay(e)". A remix 12" was also released featuring "Teethgrinder" (Tee Hee Dub Mix) and "Teethgrinder" (Unsane Mix). The single reached number 30 in the UK Singles Chart and number 19 in the Irish Singles Chart.{{cite web | url=http://www.irishcharts.ie/search/placement | title=Irish Chart History}}
  • "Nausea" was released as a radio-only single in America in 1992 with "Teethgrinder" (Tee Hee Dub Mix).
  • "Perversonality" was released as a radio-only single in America in 1993 with "Totally Random Man" (BBC version), "Neck Freak" (new recording) and "Bloody Blue".

Promotional videos

  • "Teethgrinder": directed by Jon Klein
  • "Nausea": directed by Jon Klein

Sampling

  • The sample in "Nausea" ("Here I am motherfuckers!") is taken from the 1988 film Ghosts… of the Civil Dead and is spoken by Nick Cave.
  • The sample in "Teethgrinder" ("He's losing his mind and he feels it going") is taken from a 1960s information film by the US Navy warning of the dangers of LSD, a section of which was later included in a BBC documentary called The Beyond Within. The sample was also used by the Canadian group Skinny Puppy near the beginning of the track "Convulsion" from Too Dark Park (1990).
  • Other samples in "Teethgrinder" are taken from a TV documentary entitled American Conversations.

Triva

The album cover is prominently on display in a Seinfeld episode, The Old Man, in the scenes in Bleeker Bob's record store.

References

{{reflist}}

{{Therapy?}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:1992 albums

Category:Therapy? albums

Category:A&M Records albums