Back to Mystery City | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Hanoi Rocks |
Cover: | Back To Mystery City.jpg |
Released: | May 1983 |
Recorded: | 1983 |
Length: | 44:16 |
Label: | Johanna Kustannus, Lick Records, Nippon Phonogram |
Producer: | Dale "Buffin" Griffin and Pete "Overend" Watts |
Prev Title: | Self Destruction Blues |
Prev Year: | 1982 |
Next Title: | All Those Wasted Years |
Next Year: | 1984 |
Back to Mystery City is the fourth studio album by the Finnish rock band Hanoi Rocks, released in 1983. It was produced by ex-Mott the Hoople members Dale Griffin and Pete "Overend" Watts, and was the first with Razzle on drums. Besides Hanoi Rocks, the album also features keyboardist Morgan Fisher, and Miriam Stockley on backing vocals, who had also sung with Pink Floyd.
McCoy wrote song at home while smoking hashish. The song was originally recorded in 1981 as a calypso version titled "Malibu Nightmare". This version was just made as a joke but it was re-recorded for this album, as a more serious rock song. The song was also released as a single.
Andy McCoy wrote this song at the band's manager Seppo Vesterinen's house in Helsinki. McCoy hated the song but Razzle loved it, and wanted it on their next record. Ultimately, McCoy also fell in love with the song. The song is also an example of Hanoi Rocks' melodic glam rock-style. The arrangement for the song was inspired by Alice Cooper's "I'm Eighteen". L.A. Guns covered the song on their 2004 album Rips the Covers Off.
In a contemporary review for The Village Voice, music critic Robert Christgau said that Monroe and McCoy lack hooks, are backed by "cute if over-calculated" dual guitar playing, and "yowl English-language lyrics that must impress Finns more than native speakers like myself."[1]
In 2005, Back to Mystery City was ranked number 293 in Rock Hard magazine's book The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time.[2]
Back to Mystery City is also featured in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[3]
scope=col | Chart (1983) | scope=col | Peak position |
---|---|---|---|
Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[4] | 6 | ||
scope=row | Japanese Albums (Oricon)[5] | 64 | |