The Blind Leading the Naked explained

The Blind Leading the Naked
Type:Album
Artist:Violent Femmes
Cover:The_Blind_Leading_The_Naked.jpg
Released:1986
Recorded:July – September 1985
Length:37:36
Label:Slash
Producer:Jerry Harrison
Prev Title:Hallowed Ground
Prev Year:1984
Next Title:3
Next Year:1988

The Blind Leading the Naked is the third album by Violent Femmes. It was produced by Jerry Harrison of Talking Heads and released in 1986. The title is a play on the figure of speech "the blind leading the blind."

The Blind Leading the Naked was the band's first album to reach the Billboard 200 chart, peaking at number 84, and its only one to chart in Britain.

Production and recording

The band said Leo Kottke and Fred Frith were both persuaded to appear on the album after approaching them at their concerts. "I just went along and asked him if he'd like to come down and try something out in the studio," Ritchie said of Frith.[1]

Members of the band said they were unhappy with the choice of Harrison as producer, with Ritchie saying, "We knew Jerry and he'd seen us live and, uh, he didn't like it... And when I heard the reasons that he didn't like it, well, they were the reasons why we do like it! We didn't think he was right to produce music as weird as ours." Gano further claimed that Harrison had been suggested by Warners, "solely on the basis that he lives in Milwaukee, because we'd stipulated to them that we had to record there. This was outrageous from their point of view."[2]

Reception

AllMusic gave the album a positive review, stating the album was a "more mainstream effort" that "rocks harder" than previous albums. People gave a positive review, stating "the group maintains enough humor and angst to keep even their religious songs fresh.... This third album gives more evidence that the Violent Femmes rank with the very best bands of the 1980s", while singling out the song "Breakin' Hearts" as a highlight.[3] However, in a retrospective of their debut album, The Atlantic mentions The Blind Leading the Naked is "their first unmitigated disaster, a crassly commercial piece of pandering."[4]

Personnel

Violent Femmes

Additional musicians

Charts

Chart (1986)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[5] 31
United Kingdom (Official Charts Company)[6] 81
United States (Billboard 200)[7] 84

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: . Violent Femmes: Dangerous Visions. Andy Gill .
  2. Web site: . Violent Femmes: Femme-Inism. Sandy Robertson .
  3. Web site: Picks and Pans Review: The Blind Leading the Naked. People.com.
  4. Web site: Why Violent Femmes' Classic Debut Still Seems So Young, 30 Years Later . 2013-04-16 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20230420074205/https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/04/why-violent-femmes-classic-debut-still-seems-so-young-30-years-later/274991/ . 2023-04-20 . live .
  5. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 330.
  6. Web site: Official Charts Company. Officialcharts.com.
  7. Whitburn, Joel; Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Albums, 1955–1996; p. 819.