Open Up and Say... Ahh! | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Poison |
Cover: | Open_Up_and_Say_Ahh_Cover.jpg |
Alt: | a model dressed as a demon with a long red tongue. |
Caption: | Original version of the cover art |
Recorded: | Late 1987 – early 1988 |
Studio: | Conway Recording, Los Angeles |
Genre: | Glam metal[1] [2] |
Length: | 36:12 |
Label: | Enigma |
Producer: | Tom Werman |
Prev Title: | Look What the Cat Dragged In |
Prev Year: | 1986 |
Next Title: | Flesh & Blood |
Next Year: | 1990 |
Open Up and Say... Ahh! is the second studio album by American glam metal band Poison, released on April 27, 1988, through Enigma Records. It proved to be the band's most successful release, and spawned four hit singles: "Nothin' But a Good Time", "Fallen Angel", "Your Mama Don't Dance" (a Loggins and Messina cover) and their only number one single to date, "Every Rose Has Its Thorn". The album peaked at number two on the US Billboard 200.
Open Up And Say Ahh was certified platinum in 1988 and 5× platinum in 1991 by the RIAA.[3] It also has been certified 4× platinum in Canada and gold by the BPI.
The album was recorded and mixed at Conway Recording Studios in Los Angeles. Paul Stanley from KISS (whose song "Rock and Roll All Nite" had been covered by Poison the year before) was originally selected to produce the record, but was unable to fulfill the role due to scheduling conflicts. Instead, the band worked with Tom Werman. Werman was an experienced rock producer, having worked with artists such as Ted Nugent, Cheap Trick, Twisted Sister and Mötley Crüe. Following the album was the release of the band's first video compilation, titled Sight for Sore Ears, which featured all the music videos from Open Up and Say...Ahh! and Look What the Cat Dragged In.
The original front cover of the album, which featured model Bambi dressed as a luminous red demon with a protruding tongue, caused controversy among parental groups. The band changed the cover so that only the model's eyes were visible.[4] [5] [6]
Vocalist Bret Michaels allegedly wrote the band's most successful single, "Every Rose Has Its Thorn", in response to a failed love affair with a Los Angeles stripper. Poison had been playing at a cowboy bar called The Ritz in Dallas, Texas. After the show, Michaels called the woman at her apartment and heard a man's voice in the background. Heartbroken, he wrote the song with an acoustic guitar in a laundromat.[7]
The first single "Nothin' But a Good Time" was born from the merger of a guitar riff by C. C. DeVille and a chorus by Michaels. Michaels later explained that he was in search of a "kick ass big arena rock song" which would make him feel good about his life. The song was about "not wanting to be held back by working a job and being depressed", as portrayed in its music video.
The music video for the second single, "Fallen Angel", features model and then aspiring singer/actress Susie Hatton (Bret's then-girlfriend, who released one solo album, Body and Soul; in 1991).
The fourth single, "Your Mama Don't Dance", was a cover version of the 1972 song written by Loggins and Messina from their 1972 self-titled album, which was recently covered by hard rock band Y&T on their album Down for the Count.
Two additional songs written for the record, "Livin' for the Minute" and "Face the Hangman", were later released as B-sides. "Face the Hangman" was later included on Crack a Smile... and More!.
Additional credits:
Chart (1988-1989) | Peak position |
---|---|
Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[8] | 16 |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[9] | 35 |
Chart (1989) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[11] | 10 | |
US Billboard 200[12] | 20 |