Return of the Rentals
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Return of the Rentals is the debut album by alternative rock band The Rentals, released on October 24, 1995, through Maverick Records, a subsidiary of Reprise Records. The album features Matt Sharp—Weezer's bassist at the time—on vocals and bass, as well as Weezer drummer Patrick Wilson. Other contributors include Tom Grimley (Moog, production), Petra Haden (violin, vocals), Rachel Haden (vocals), Guy Oseary (album artwork), and Stephen Marcussen (mastering).[1]
Return of the Rentals was well received by critics and produced the successful single "Friends of P.", which peaked at number 7 on Billboard's Modern Rock Chart and received significant airplay on MTV's 120 Minutes. Despite this, the album never charted.
Track listing
All songs written by Matt Sharp and performed by The Rentals.
- "The Love I'm Searching For" - 3:36
- "Waiting" - 3:13
- "Friends of P." - 3:32
- "Move On" - 4:21
- "Please Let That Be You" - 3:34
- "My Summer Girl" - 3:13
- "Brilliant Boy" - 4:16
- "Naive" - 2:20
- "These Days" - 3:00
- "Sweetness and Tenderness" - 4:22
The "P" in the track "Friends of P." has had multiple theories presented as to its meaning. The actual "P" in the song refers to Paulina Porizkova, the wife of The Cars guitarist Ric Ocasek, who produced the first Weezer album, known as The Blue Album.[2] Paulina made a claim that no one had ever written a song about her, and so Sharp took on the task. Ocasek noted that he found the subject matter of the song a bit odd. Fictitious theories suggest that the subject deals with psychics or the Psychic Friends Network. Finally, some think the "P" is for Patrick Wilson, drummer on the album and also drummer for Weezer.
"Please Let That Be You" was originally written by Sharp and Rivers Cuomo as a song called "Mrs.Young", a spiritual counterpart to Weezer's song "Jamie". On one demo, Rivers Cuomo helps Sharp, doing extra instrumentation and backup vocals. At one point, Weezer considered recording both "Jamie" with "Mrs.Young" (later written as "Please Let That Be You" without Rivers Cuomo but instead with Rachel Haden) as its B-side for a single, but this never happened.
"Waiting" is featured in the 1996 film Joe's Apartment.
Reception
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Q Magazine | [3] |
Pitchfork Media | (8.0/10) [4] |
NME | [5] |
AllMusic | [6] |
Return of the Rentals received generally favorable reviews from critics.[7] Entertainment Weekly gave the album a "B" and claimed, "Its winsome love songs make for good, clean, disposable fun."[8] Q magazine gave the album 3 stars and compared the Rentals' work to the early work of the Cars: "The Rentals root themselves in the sound of late-`70s US new wave; the result is in many senses reminiscent of The Cars' earlier material."[9] NME also praised the album, giving it a 7 out of 10 and complimenting that "despite its pretensions to [be] meaningless electro-pop, it can't help but have depth".[10] Pitchfork Media's Ryan Schreiber also highly praised the album and enjoyed the band's attempt to bring back Moog synthesizers.[11] Peter D'Angelo of AllMusic praised the album as well, saying, "Return of the Rentals is a real benchmark of carefree pop from the '90s, and shouldn't be forgotten anytime soon."[12]
Cover versions
This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2013) |
In 2006, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs covered "The Love I'm Searching For" on an AOL The Interface podcast.[13]
In March 2008, Ash covered "Please Let That Be You" for the album Friends of P. -- Tribute to The Rentals.
Tokyo Police Club did a cover of "Friends of P.", which appears on their album Elephant Shell Remixes.
Girl Talk sampled "Friends of P." on his 2006 album Night Ripper.
Tera Melos' guitarist Nick Reinheart uploaded a cover of the track "These Days" to SoundCloud.[14]
Performers
- Matt Sharp (vocals, bass, moog, extra guitars)
- Cherielynn Westrich (female lead vocals)
- Patrick Wilson (drums)
- Petra Haden (viola, harmony vocals)
- Rod Cervera (main guitars)
- Tom Grimley (main moog synthesizers)
Guest performers
- Jim Richards (moog on "Please Let That Be You")
- Rachel Haden (vocals on "Move On")
References
- ^ Return of the Rentals booklet and liner notes
- ^ Luerssen D., John. Rivers' Edge: The Weezer Story. ECW Press, 2004, ISBN 1-55022-619-3 p. 163
- ^ "Q Magazine | Music news & reviews, music videos, band pictures & interviewsQ Magazine". Qthemusic.com. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
- ^ "The Rentals: Return of...: Pitchfork Review". Web.archive.org. 2001-12-12. Archived from the original on December 12, 2001. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Peter J. D'Angelo. "Return of the Rentals - The Rentals | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
- ^ "Return of the Rentals". Tower Records. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ Entertainment Weekly Nov 3, 1995, p.64
- ^ Q March 1995, p.103
- ^ NME Jan 20, 1996, p.42
- ^ Schreiber, Ryan. "The Rentals: Return of the Rentals: Pitchfork Record Review". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ D'Angelo, Peter. "Return of the Rentals > Overview". AllMusic. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ Maher, Dave. "Yeah Yeah Yeahs Cover the Rentals on Podcast". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ "These Days (The Rentals) by nick reinhart | Free Listening on SoundCloud". Soundcloud.com. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
External links
- The Return of the Rentals ⚠ "
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" is missing! at MusicBrainz - Return of the Rentals on Billboard.com