Everyone's Got One | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Echobelly |
Cover: | echobelly ego.jpg |
Released: | 22 August 1994 |
Studio: | A residential studio in Chipping Norton |
Genre: | Britpop |
Length: | 41:16 |
Label: | Rhythm King |
Producer: | Simon Vinestock |
Next Title: | On |
Next Year: | 1995 |
Everyone's Got One is the debut studio album by English rock band Echobelly. Released to a favourable response from critics,[1] the album reached number 8 in the UK Albums Chart in September 1994. On 21 July 2014, a 2CD expanded edition of the album was released by 3 Loop Music which featured B-sides and previously unreleased live material.
Reflecting her fascination for wordplay, lead singer Sonya Madan titled the album Everyone's Got One, with the first letter of each word spelling "EGO", a common theme throughout the album.
Madan wrote the songs "Today, Tomorrow, Sometime, Never" and "Call Me Names" about her feelings of alienation due to her Indian heritage: "Even though I have a brown skin, I didn't feel Asian. I felt alien".[2] "Father Ruler King Computer" discusses her anger towards arranged marriages: "I was brought up, I've been told, that a husband is the goal. What connotations in these loaded words, a spinster and a bachelor, I am whole all by myself, I don't need nobody else."[2] Other topics covered in her lyrics include empowering women ("Give Her a Gun"), self-confidence ("I Can't Imagine the World Without Me"), a friend's abortion ("Bellyache"), and loneliness ("Close… But").[2]
The Independent wrote that "it's Madan's appeal upon which the group's fortunes most heavily rest: a natural, androgyne beauty, her voice is the single most noteworthy aspect of their sound, possessing an elegant clarity bizarrely at odds with the music's darker intentions."[3] The Guardian deemed the album "brisk Blondie-ish power-pop."[4]
In 2017, Pitchfork placed Everyone's Got One at number 48 on their list of "The 50 Best Britpop Albums".[5]
Credits adapted from liner notes.[6]