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・ Rocket to Nowhere
・ Rocket to Ramonia
・ Rocket to Russia
・ Rocket to Russia (The Queers album)
・ Rocket to the Moon
・ Rocket to the Moon (play)
・ Rocket to the Morgue
・ Rocket to Uranus
・ Rocket to You 93–99
・ Rocket Transfer Warehouse
・ Rocket turbine engine
・ Rockeskyll
・ Rockestra Theme
・ Rocket
・ Rocket (2015 film)
Rocket (album)
・ Rocket (band)
・ Rocket (Beyoncé song)
・ Rocket (comics)
・ Rocket (Def Leppard song)
・ Rocket (disambiguation)
・ Rocket (El Presidente song)
・ Rocket (firework)
・ Rocket (Goldfrapp song)
・ Rocket (Mohamed Ali song)
・ Rocket (nickname)
・ Rocket (The Smashing Pumpkins song)
・ Rocket (weapon)
・ Rocket 2 U
・ Rocket 88


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Rocket (album) : ウィキペディア英語版
Rocket (album)


|rev2 = Pitchfork Media
|rev2score = (1.2/10)〔()〕
|rev3 = Sputnikmusic
|rev3score = (link )
}}
''Rocket'' is the Primitive Radio Gods' debut album, released on June 18, 1996 by Columbia Records. Their best known hit single from this album, "Standing Outside a Broken Phone Booth with Money in My Hand", helped launch the band's career.
==Reception==
Despite the critical acclaim surrounding the lead single, the album as a whole received negative reviews from critics. Allmusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote "With its loping, unthreatening hip-hop beats and its looped B.B. King sample, "Standing" had all the appeal of an adult novelty for most listeners—it was something that was out of the ordinary, to be sure, but not something that you would want to investigate much further. Sadly, Primitive Radio Gods' debut mini-album, ''Rocket'', proves those doubters right." Erlewine criticized the frequency of sampling in the album, stating "Most of Rocket sounds ''exactly'' like somebody messing around with a four-track, more intent on capturing sounds, not songs. Usually, this would at least result in some interesting sounds, but O'Connor hasn't even managed that", and concluded with "At its core, ''Rocket'' sounds like a demo tape with one promising song".
Sputnikmusic writer Adam Downer lauded the lead single but panned the rest of the album, writing "Primitive Radio Gods never attempt to replicate "Broken Phone Booth" in terms atmosphere or quality, and the rest of ''Rocket'' runs like a cluster() of everything between cheesy 80's hair metal and long-since forgotten 90's alternative rock." Downer also criticized the lyrics, writing "Worse than their inability to find a niche in terms of genre is the curiously pretentious attitude the Primitive Radio Gods give off. This is mostly due in part to O’Connor’s lyrical skill, which fails at portraying every emotion from cockiness to anger. O’Connor’s lyrics are laughably awful: Preachy, amateurish, and unjustifiably pissed off at matters like religion, urban life, and stardom, three topics which he appears to have only a skin-deep understanding of judging from the stupidity of his words." Much like Allmusic, Downer also noted the sampling, writing: "Furthering Primitive Radio Gods’ pretension is their obnoxious use of samples, which, though successful on “Broken Phone Booth”, grow obtrusive with continued incorporation, at times sucking any hint of listenabilility out of tracks on ''Rocket''."
Perhaps the most negative review came from Pitchfork writer Ryan Schreiber, who said "At any rate, you don't want ''Rocket'' in your record collection now or ever since the music sounds like a third-rate, decaffeinated version of Ned's Atomic Dustbin and because, by reading Pitchfork, you've already proven you have better taste than that (I hope)." Schreiber gave it an extremely negative rating of 1.2/10, falling under "Awful, not a single pleasant track". However, Schreiber wrote that "Phone Booth" "as a single, is going to sell like the Rubik's Cube.", but that "as an album? Let's face it: Three minutes is enough for even the most mind-numbed, tasteless societal outcast."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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