Revolutions per Minute (Skid Row album) explained

Revolutions per Minute
Type:studio
Artist:Skid Row
Cover:Skidrev.jpg
Recorded:2005–2006
Studio:WireWorld Studio, Nashville, Tennessee
Genre:Heavy metal
Length:40:24
Label:SPV/Steamhammer
Victor (Japan)
Producer:Michael Wagener
Prev Title:Thickskin
Prev Year:2003
Next Title:United World Rebellion
Next Year:2013–2014

Revolutions per Minute is the fifth studio album by American heavy metal band Skid Row, released on October 24, 2006. It is the band's only release with drummer Dave Gara and their last full album with vocalist Johnny Solinger.

Release and promotion

Michael Wagener temporarily reunited with Skid Row and produced the album. It had been 15 years since he co-produced the band's second album Slave to the Grind in 1991. The album received negative reviews and only charted in Japan at number 266.[1] "Shut Up Baby, I Love You" and "Nothing" were released as promo singles [2] and "Strength" is a cover song originally performed by The Alarm.

Critical reception

The album received generally negative reviews. Rock Hard reviewer appreciated the "twelve strong and sometimes punk-tinged hard rockers" in the album and wrote that Skid Row were still capable of producing "ingenious catchy tunes". Marcus Pan of Legends Magazine enjoyed the album and wrote that Skid Row "sound very similar to how they did fifteen years ago", with Solinger a capable singer, who "can hold his own against Bach".[3] Greg Prato of AllMusic had the same impression and wrote that the album offers the "same angry-yet-melodic riff rockers that you long ago came to expect from the group, while Solinger's singing style isn't that far removed from Bach's", concluding that this is "just what you'd expect from Skid Row - for better or for worse." On the contrary, Chad Bowar writing for About.com considered Revolution per Minute "a really diverse album", full of "really catchy songs, good musicianship and showcasing many different facets of Skid Row", with influences ranging from punk, to country, to new wave. Sputnikmusic reviewer found Revolutions per Minute "more appealing" than the "bland poke at modern alternative rock" that were Subhuman Race and Thickskin, but lamented "a massive lack of cohesion" in blending "elements of classic punk, post-punk, country and goth" which "come at the expense of the soaring melodies and break-neck dynamics that made Bach's Skid Row such an exciting listen." Kaj Roth of Melodic.net considered Revolutions per Minute "even worse" than Thickskin, their weakest album, and the music "a worthless cargo of nonsense hard rock."

Personnel

Skid Row
Additional musicians
Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Skid Row Chart History. Oricon. 2010-12-09.
  2. Web site: Skid Row singles. Eil.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20121021030420/https://eil.com/shop/moreinfo.asp?catalogid=381116. October 21, 2012.
  3. Skid Row – "Revolutions Per Minute". https://web.archive.org/web/20070506112837/http://www.legendsmagazine.net/163/skidrow.htm. usurped. May 6, 2007. Marcus. Pan. Legends Magazine. February 19, 2013.
  4. Web site: Skid Row Chart History. Oricon. September 12, 2010.