The Dictators Go Girl Crazy! Explained

The Dictators Go Girl Crazy!
Type:studio
Artist:The Dictators
Cover:TheDictatorsGoGirlCrazy.jpg
Released:March 1975
Recorded:1975
Studio:CBS Studios, New York City
Genre:Proto-punk
Length:34:48
Label:Epic
Au Go Go (1989 Australian release)
Producer:Murray Krugman, Sandy Pearlman
Next Title:Manifest Destiny
Next Year:1977

The Dictators Go Girl Crazy! is the debut album by American punk rock band The Dictators. It was released in March 1975 and is considered one of the first examples of punk rock.[1] [2] [3]

Response

Critical reception

The Dictators Go Girl Crazy! has been well-received critically and is considered a precursor to punk rock. In its retrospective review, AllMusic notes that while the album was confusing to audiences at the time of its release, it became inspirational for dozens of groups to follow. Trouser Press enthused that the band deserves "scads of credit" for "blazing a long trail, melding the essentials of junk culture... with loud/hard/fast rock'n'roll and thus creating an archetype". According to a 2001 article in The Village Voice, the album's "blueprint for bad taste, humor, and defiance" has been replicated in the work of such bands as the Ramones and Beastie Boys.[4]

Trouser Press lauded the album as a "wickedly funny, brilliantly played and hopelessly naïve masterpiece of self-indulgent smartass rock'n'roll".[5] Entertainment Weekly wrote: "Go Girl Crazys junk-generation culture and smart-aleck sensibility did provide an essential blueprint for '70s punk. With its TV references and homely vocals, this ground-breaking and long-unavailable album continues to inspire underground groups everywhere." Canadian journalist Martin Popoff enjoyed the album and considered the Dictators "more obviously comedians than musicians", "with a sense of self-deprecating humor poking sticks at the seriousness of heavy metal".

Dave Marsh was less enthusiastic though, describing the record as a "banal collection of recycled 'Pipeline' instrumentals coupled with a vocalist who sounds, yes, precisely like a yowling wrestler on Saturday afternoon TV" in Rolling Stone,[6] and giving the album zero stars in The Rolling Stone Record Guide.

Influence

In addition to this early punk rock influencing the style to come, the album was also one of two factors influencing the creation of Punk magazine by John Holmstrom and music journalist Legs McNeil. In Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk, McNeil said that the album so resonated with him and his friends that they started the magazine strictly so they could "hang out with the Dictators".[7]

Personnel

The Dictators
Additional musicians
Production

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rombes, Nicholas. A Cultural Dictionary of Punk: 1974–1982. Continuum International Publishing Group. 2009. 978-0826427793. 20. registration.
  2. Book: Waksman, Steve. This Ain't the Summer of Love: Conflict and Crossover in Heavy Metal and Punk. University of California Press. 2009. 978-0-520-25310-0. 119. registration.
  3. Book: Wolf, Mary Montgomery. "We accept you, one of us?": Punk rock, community, and individualism in an uncertain era, 1974--1985. 2007. 317. 9780549325819.
  4. News: Lefelt. Jack. Manifest Destiny. The Village Voice. October 9, 2001. September 19, 2020.
  5. Web site: Robbins. Ira. Dictators. Trouser Press. February 21, 2012.
  6. Rolling Stone, June 5th 1975
  7. Book: Holmstrom. John. John Holmstrom. McNeil. Legs. Legs McNeil. Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk. Grove Press. 10th anniversary. 2006. 0-8021-4264-8. 286. registration.