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God Fodder

God Fodder is the debut studio album by English rock band Ned's Atomic Dustbin, released on 1 April 1991 by Columbia Records.[4] After creating their own imprint following the success of several prior independent singles, the band recorded the album from December 1990 to January 1991 in London. Musically, God Fodder takes large influence from grebo, shoegaze, noise pop, and dance music, characterized by noisy guitars, complex drum beats, and its usage of two bass players, with Matt Cheslin playing regular bass lines and Alex Griffin playing harmonic bass lines. Lyrically, the album features communal efforts written by all the band.

God Fodder
Studio album by
Released1 April 1991
RecordedDecember 1990–January 1991
StudioGreenhouse Studios, London
Genre
Length40:42[3]
LabelColumbia
Producer
  • Ned's Atomic Dustbin
  • Jessica Corcoran
Ned's Atomic Dustbin chronology
Bite
(1990)
God Fodder
(1991)
Are You Normal?
(1992)

Five different singles were released from God Fodder across different regions. Upon its release, the album was a critical and commercial success, reaching number 4 in the UK Albums Chart; it also found an audience in the United States, where the album reached number 91 on the Billboard 200, largely due to the band's T-shirt campaign and the videos for “Kill Your Television” and "Grey Cell Green", which gained traction on MTV's “120 Minutes Into The Future”. The record's success is said to be a triumph against the dominance of grunge music at the time. The album was named among the year's best albums by several magazines. The band played the album in its entirety for the first time in O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire in December 2009 and played it again in Birmingham in September 2010.

Background and recording edit

Ned's Atomic Dustbin formed in Stourbridge in 1987. Although the band had started out as a gothic rock band, the band "had developed a dense, assaultive sound" by the early 1990s "that was distinguished by their thundering two-bass attack."[5] After releasing The Ingredients EP, the band's official first single, "Kill Your Television", which later featured on God Fodder, was a commercial success, reaching number 53 on the UK Singles Chart and number one on the UK Independent Singles Chart and becoming critically acclaimed; furthermore, it heralded the band's new grebo sound which they would fully explore on God Fodder.[5] The success of the single lead to the band signing to Sony Music, on the grounds that the band would be allowed to release their music through their own label, Furtive, in order to retain a higher degree of creative control whilst concurrently enjoying the benefits of Sony's major label distribution and advertising clout.[5]

The band recorded their official debut album, God Fodder, between December 1990 and January 1991 at Greenhouse Studios, London,[6] co-producing the record with Jessica Cocoran.[6] Whilst the band were adding the final touches to God Fodder, the band's former label Chapter 22 released Bite, a compilation of early tracks, including the tracks from The Ingredients EP and the 'Kill Your Television" single, alongside some other tracks, without the band's input, knowledge or consent.[7]

Style edit

Music edit

"God Fodder focused on the hyper punk aspect of England's "grebo" movement, relying on insanely catchy hooks and the band's dual-bass sound to keep things interesting."

 —Nitsuh Abebe[8]

God Fodder combines grebo music, a "punk-influenced, electronica-informed, hyper, light-hearted rock" genre with which the band were associated,[1] with shoegaze music, a genre which forms the album's "prevailing beat".[2] The album was described as a "blend of frenzied, melodic rock, with the occasional touch of quirkiness", such as the band's usage of two bass players, with Matt Cheslin playing "normal basslines" whilst Alex Griffin "scratching out harmonic riffs."[1] Besides the twin bass work, the album also features complicated drum beats and distorted guitars throughout.[9] Trouser Press said the album combines catchy melodies, "pulsing adrenaline beats" and "a wool-covered wall of fuzzy pop noise on which able singer Jonn Penney pastes challenging personal lyrics."[10]

The album features influences from shoegaze bands such as Ride, numerous Los Angeles bands and "a random selection of English bands" including New Order, Icicle Works and The Wedding Present; all such influences were described as being presented in "bits" or "pinches".[2][10] The band use Peavey Electronics distortion on the album.[2] Rowdy album opener and college radio hit "Kill Your Television" previously featured on the Bite release and features "chucked cobblestone sloganeering" and was described by one reviewer as getting the album "off to a strong, provocative start."[10] "Grey Cell Green", also a college radio hit, has been described as "memorable".[10] "Selfish" is said to meld "rude dance rhythms" with "nasty guitar."[11]

Lyrics edit

Like several bands of the era, the band's bassist Alex Griffin explained that the songs on God Fodder were "communal efforts", saying "It's a lot more gratifying than working with just a single songwriter. One person brings in a 10-second idea and we build on that. It's definitely a group thing," adding that "When people tell me what one of our songs means, I say, 'Yep, you're right.' I'm not gonna dash their dreams."[11] "Selfish" is a critique on "trendies, the apathetic and mean-spirited," and opens with a sample of the Die Hard dialogue "why don't you wake up and smell what you're shovelling?," which the band included after watching the film and decided it "fitted in really well."[11] "Happy" was written by lead singer Jonn Penney, who, as Griffin explained, "writes really vague and about personal situations not necessarily his own. He doesn't like to explain."[11] Penney's lyrics on God Fodder have been described as personal and challenging.[10]

"Kill Your Television" was inspired by a sticker that Griffin purchased in Mystic, Connecticut a few years prior to the song's release whilst visiting with friends in Boston: "I had [the sticker] on my bass [while] we were in the process of writing a song which had nothing to do with television, and Penney saw it and thought it would be a good title. We like slogans; you don't forget them. So the lyrics were rewritten and [the song] became about television."[11] The "sneering, cryptic tag line" which ends the song, "soap for sore eyes," is a reference to the band's guitarist Rat who watched every soap opera on television, much to Penney's disgust.[11]

Release edit

"The 'Grey Cell Green' video caused a real public reaction, but it was the infamous T-shirt campaign that really got everybody's attention. Until that time, it hadn't jumped up and grabbed people by the throat."

 —Billboard expelling the album's gradual success build in the United States.[12]

God Fodder was released on 1 April 1991 by the band's own Sony Music imprint Furtive Records in the UK, whilst in the United States, the album was released by Columbia Records, another Sony label, on 2 July 1991. The band played concerts throughout the year worldwide in promotion of God Fodder, playing alongside bands such as, amongst others, Mega City Four, Senseless Things and Jesus Jones. The band also appeared twice on Top of the Pops in the UK. In as early as July 1991, the NME, noted that the band were, along with The KLF, Seal, The La's and Electronic, making their mark in the United States.[13]

Several singles were released from the album; "Kill Your Television" was released in the UK in 1990 before the album was recorded and in 1992 in the United States. It reached number 53 in the UK Singles Chart and number 1 in the UK Independent Singles Chart.[14] The second single, "Until You Find Out", was also released in 1990 and reached number 51 in the UK charts.[14] The first official single from the album and first Sony release, "Happy," was the third single, and reaching number 16 in the UK singles chart in March 1991 and number 11 in the US Modern Rock Tracks chart.[14] "Trust" was the final single released in the UK, reaching number 21 in September 1991,[14] whilst "Grey Cell Green" was the final American single, reaching number 24 in the US Modern Rock Tracks chart.

The album was a commercial success, reaching number 4 on the UK Albums Chart and spending five weeks on the chart in total.[14] In the United States, the album entered the Top Heetseekrs Albums chart at number 9 in October 1991, and ultimately "graduated" when it entered and peaked at number 91 on the official Billboard 200 chart in February 1992.[12] The album's gradual success in the United States lead to Billboard magazine including it in their list of the "Popular Uprising: Class of '92" in June 1992, where Columbia sales director John Doyce explained "they'd played and toured a lot of the alternative markets, and we got a real strong sense that the album would continue to sell."[12] The magazine credited the album's gradual stateside success largely to the band's T-shirt campaign,[12] referring to the band's own distinctive T-shirts, with over 86 different designs being produced within three years (1987–1990).

On 1 February 1992, God Fodder was certified "Silver" by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales of over 60,000 copies in the United Kingdom.[15][16] It has been reported that over 60,000 copies were sold in the first week alone.[17] In the United States, the album has sold over 400,000 copies.[17] As of 2013, God Fodder is estimated to have sold around 500,000 copies worldwide.[18]

Reception and legacy edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic     [19]
Sounds     [20]
Trouser Press(favourable)[10]

The album was praised by most of the major music magazines upon its release, and retrospective commentary on the album has also been generally favourable, with some critics citing it as their best album. Nitsuh Abebe of Allmusic rated the album four stars out of five, saying it was arguably the band's best album and adding that, although the album may not be groundbreaking, it was "certainly solid."[1] The reviewer also said the album was "consistently satisfying" and mentioned how the band's "light and hooky" sound was enough "to put quite a distance between their oeuvre and that of the average grebo or punk band."[1] Trouser Press were also favourable, praising the album's "strong start" and saying that, "derivative to the core, the Neds pinch bits from a random selection of English bands (Wedding Present, Icicle Works, New Order, etc.), but they do so with such breathless enthusiasm that it suits the good-natured cheesiness of the whole endeavor."[10]

At the end of 1991, several magazines included the album on their lists of the top 50 albums of the year; NME ranked it 23rd,[21] whilst Select ranked it 39th.[22] "Kill Your Television" had already ranked at number 37 in NME's list of the top 50 singles of 1990,[23] whilst it also ranked at number 26 in the same year's edition of the Festive Fifty, a poll of the top 50 songs of the year assembled by John Peel listeners.[24] The Morning Call referred to the record as a "fine" album.[11] In 2013, Kyle Ryan of The A.V. Club spoke of how "Grey Cell Green" and "Happy" were "jams back in the day" and how the latter songs remained one of his "all-time favourite songs."[25] Less favourable to God Fodder was Pitchfork Media's Chris Ott, saying that "Ned Atomic Dustbin's shook their long-on-top dos to the prevailing beat–namely shoegaze. A pinch of Swervedriver, a touch of Ride, the cheesy Peavey distortion of a thousand bad L.A. bands and some timely looks?"[2] In 2003, the website included it at number 10 in their list of "Castoffs and Cutouts: The Top 50 Most Common Used CDs."[2]

In 2010, Magnet magazine ranked the song "Happy" at number 11 in their list of "120 Reasons to Live," a list celebrating the 1990s underground music that was aired on MTV's alternative music show 120 Minutes. in the description for the song's entry, the magazine cited God Fodder as their best album and spoke of how its double-bass approach helped the band survive the dominance of grunge music, saying that despite there being "a lot to dislike" about the band in retrospect, such as their "terrible style" of "baggy clothes, dreadlocks—a vaguely secondhand hippie-punk look", having "a guitarist named Rat", a "whimsical" album title in God Fodder and two bass players, the latter is what helped make the band unique:

"Actually, the double-bass approach is what elevated Ned’s Atomic Dustbin above the grunge floodwaters that drowned just about every other U.K. band in the early '90s: Ned's pairing of Hüsker Dü-style distorted guitars with an overzealous rhythm section was successful for the duration of one album. 1991 debut God Fodder was loaded with singles, with "Happy" and "Grey Cell Green" among the best efforts at bridging the gap between Britpop and American punk influences. Ned’s Atomic Dustbin went on to record two more albums, but God Fodder is its classic—the band reunited to perform the album in its entirety in London last year."[26]

Live concerts edit

 
The band playing God Fodder at O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire in 2009.

Having reformed in 2009, all five original members of the band played God Fodder from start to finish in London, on 19 December 2009 at the O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire.[27] After playing the album, the band played other tracks from their catalogue.[17] One of the band's classic T-shirt designs was sold at the show's merchandise stand for the first time since the God Fodder era.[17] The concert was critically acclaimed.[28]

The band played the entirety of the album again at the HMV Institute in Birmingham on 25 September 2010 as part of the institute's reopening.[29] Interviewed prior to the Birmingham concert, Penney stated that "back when we first toured God Fodder, we didn’t play in Birmingham and that’s something we’ll be very happy to address all these years later. We can’t wait to christen the new venue and set a new bar-takings record."[29]

Speaking to The Birmingham Mail, Penney said "we played the whole of God Fodder at Shepherd’s Bush in London last Christmas and we thought it would be nice to do it in the Midlands as well. It captures that moment in the 90s when the indie scene in Birmingham and the Black Country was buzzing. It’s quite a fast little album and it’s over fairly quickly, so we’ll come back on and do a Best of set."[30]

Track listing edit

All songs written by Ned's Atomic Dustbin.

  1. "Kill Your Television" - 2:59
  2. "Less Than Useful" - 4:05
  3. "Selfish" - 3:54
  4. "Grey Cell Green" - 3:47
  5. "Cut Up" - 3:07
  6. "Throwing Things" - 3:24
  7. "Capital Letters" - 2:55
  8. "Happy" - 3:59
  9. "Your Complex" - 2:38
  10. "Nothing Like" - 2:41
  11. "Until You Find Out" - 3:10
  12. "You" - 2:03
  13. "What Gives My Son?"[31] 2:48

Personnel edit

Adapted from the liner notes.

  • Dan Dan The Fast Drumming Man
  • Alex Plays One Bass
  • Mat The Other
  • Rat: Does The Guitar
  • and Jonn Sings.[3]

Charts edit

Chart performance for God Fodder
Chart (1991–1992) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[32] 95
UK Albums (OCC)[33] 4
US Billboard 200[34] 91

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "God Fodder - Ned's Atomic Dustbin - Songs, Reviews, Credits - AllMusic". AllMusic.
  2. ^ a b c d e f . 26 December 2003. Archived from the original on 26 December 2003.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ a b . Theend.co.il. Archived from the original on 29 March 2004. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  4. ^ Jzwickel (2 July 1991). "God Fodder : Ned's Atomic Dustbin". Rhapsody.com. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  5. ^ a b c "Ned's Atomic Dustbin - Biography & History - AllMusic". AllMusic.
  6. ^ a b Liner notes.
  7. ^ "Bite - Ned's Atomic Dustbin - Songs, Reviews, Credits - AllMusic". AllMusic.
  8. ^ "Are You Normal? - Ned's Atomic Dustbin - Songs, Reviews, Credits - AllMusic". AllMusic.
  9. ^ "nedsatomicdustbin - MUDKISS FANZINE". Mudkiss.com. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Ned's Atomic Dustbin". Trouserpress.com. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g "Ned's Atomic Dustbin Sweeps Group Efforts into Song Writing". Articles.mcall.com. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d Inc, Nielsen Business Media (20 June 1992). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. – via Google Books. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  13. ^ Tobler, John (1992). NME Rock 'N' Roll Years (1st ed.). London: Reed International Books Ltd. p. 486. CN 5585.
  14. ^ a b c d e "NED'S ATOMIC DUSTBIN - full Official Chart History - Official Charts Company". OfficialCharts.com.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 May 2013. Retrieved 17 October 2016.
  16. ^ "Rockmine : Today In Music". Rockmine.com. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  17. ^ a b c d "Ned's Atomic Dustbin - God Fodder at Shepherds Bush Empire (London) on 19 Dec 2009". Last.fm.
  18. ^ "NED'S ATOMIC DUSTBIN - London Shepards Bush Empire - 22 November 2013". The Final Word.
  19. ^ "God Fodder - Ned's Atomic Dustbin | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  20. ^ Peart, Andy (30 March 1991). "Get Stuffed". Sounds. p. 39.
  21. ^ "1991 - NME". NME. 10 October 2016.
  22. ^ "Select End Of Year Lists." Rocklistmusic.co.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  23. ^ "NME End Of Year Lists 1990..." Rocklistmusic.co.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  24. ^ "John Peel's Festive 50's - 1977 - 2003". Rocklistmusic.co.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  25. ^ "Ned's Atomic Dustbin was more than an also-ran of the early alternative era". The A.V. Club. 28 March 2013.
  26. ^ "120 Reasons To Live: Ned's Atomic Dustbin". Magnetmagazine.com. 22 June 2010.
  27. ^ "Neds Atomic Dustbin Gigs". Nedsatomicdustbin.com. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  28. ^ Fix, Lorne Thomson, The Digital (25 March 2023). "Ned's Atomic Dustbin - Shepherds Bush Empire - Live Review - Music @ The Digital Fix".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  29. ^ a b "Approved: Ned's Atomic Dustbin God Fodder Gig". Completemusicupdate.com. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  30. ^ Mail, Birmingham (16 September 2010). "Music: Ned's Atomic Dustbin perform God Fodder at HMV Institute".
  31. ^ "Ned's Atomic Dustbin - God Fodder at Discogs". Discogs.com. 6 October 1991. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  32. ^ Ryan, Gavin (2011). Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010 (PDF ed.). Mt Martha, Victoria, Australia: Moonlight Publishing. p. 200.
  33. ^ "Official Albums Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  34. ^ "Ned's Atomic Dustbin Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved 1 September 2022.

fodder, kill, your, television, redirects, here, album, reunion, show, reunion, show, debut, studio, album, english, rock, band, atomic, dustbin, released, april, 1991, columbia, records, after, creating, their, imprint, following, success, several, prior, ind. Kill Your Television redirects here For the album by the Reunion Show see the Reunion Show God Fodder is the debut studio album by English rock band Ned s Atomic Dustbin released on 1 April 1991 by Columbia Records 4 After creating their own imprint following the success of several prior independent singles the band recorded the album from December 1990 to January 1991 in London Musically God Fodder takes large influence from grebo shoegaze noise pop and dance music characterized by noisy guitars complex drum beats and its usage of two bass players with Matt Cheslin playing regular bass lines and Alex Griffin playing harmonic bass lines Lyrically the album features communal efforts written by all the band God FodderStudio album by Ned s Atomic DustbinReleased1 April 1991RecordedDecember 1990 January 1991StudioGreenhouse Studios LondonGenreAlternative rock grebo 1 shoegaze 2 Length40 42 3 LabelColumbiaProducerNed s Atomic Dustbin Jessica CorcoranNed s Atomic Dustbin chronologyBite 1990 God Fodder 1991 Are You Normal 1992 Five different singles were released from God Fodder across different regions Upon its release the album was a critical and commercial success reaching number 4 in the UK Albums Chart it also found an audience in the United States where the album reached number 91 on the Billboard 200 largely due to the band s T shirt campaign and the videos for Kill Your Television and Grey Cell Green which gained traction on MTV s 120 Minutes Into The Future The record s success is said to be a triumph against the dominance of grunge music at the time The album was named among the year s best albums by several magazines The band played the album in its entirety for the first time in O2 Shepherd s Bush Empire in December 2009 and played it again in Birmingham in September 2010 Contents 1 Background and recording 2 Style 2 1 Music 2 2 Lyrics 3 Release 4 Reception and legacy 5 Live concerts 6 Track listing 7 Personnel 8 Charts 9 ReferencesBackground and recording editNed s Atomic Dustbin formed in Stourbridge in 1987 Although the band had started out as a gothic rock band the band had developed a dense assaultive sound by the early 1990s that was distinguished by their thundering two bass attack 5 After releasing The Ingredients EP the band s official first single Kill Your Television which later featured on God Fodder was a commercial success reaching number 53 on the UK Singles Chart and number one on the UK Independent Singles Chart and becoming critically acclaimed furthermore it heralded the band s new grebo sound which they would fully explore on God Fodder 5 The success of the single lead to the band signing to Sony Music on the grounds that the band would be allowed to release their music through their own label Furtive in order to retain a higher degree of creative control whilst concurrently enjoying the benefits of Sony s major label distribution and advertising clout 5 The band recorded their official debut album God Fodder between December 1990 and January 1991 at Greenhouse Studios London 6 co producing the record with Jessica Cocoran 6 Whilst the band were adding the final touches to God Fodder the band s former label Chapter 22 released Bite a compilation of early tracks including the tracks from The Ingredients EP and the Kill Your Television single alongside some other tracks without the band s input knowledge or consent 7 Style editMusic edit God Fodder focused on the hyper punk aspect of England s grebo movement relying on insanely catchy hooks and the band s dual bass sound to keep things interesting Nitsuh Abebe 8 God Fodder combines grebo music a punk influenced electronica informed hyper light hearted rock genre with which the band were associated 1 with shoegaze music a genre which forms the album s prevailing beat 2 The album was described as a blend of frenzied melodic rock with the occasional touch of quirkiness such as the band s usage of two bass players with Matt Cheslin playing normal basslines whilst Alex Griffin scratching out harmonic riffs 1 Besides the twin bass work the album also features complicated drum beats and distorted guitars throughout 9 Trouser Press said the album combines catchy melodies pulsing adrenaline beats and a wool covered wall of fuzzy pop noise on which able singer Jonn Penney pastes challenging personal lyrics 10 The album features influences from shoegaze bands such as Ride numerous Los Angeles bands and a random selection of English bands including New Order Icicle Works and The Wedding Present all such influences were described as being presented in bits or pinches 2 10 The band use Peavey Electronics distortion on the album 2 Rowdy album opener and college radio hit Kill Your Television previously featured on the Bite release and features chucked cobblestone sloganeering and was described by one reviewer as getting the album off to a strong provocative start 10 Grey Cell Green also a college radio hit has been described as memorable 10 Selfish is said to meld rude dance rhythms with nasty guitar 11 Lyrics edit Like several bands of the era the band s bassist Alex Griffin explained that the songs on God Fodder were communal efforts saying It s a lot more gratifying than working with just a single songwriter One person brings in a 10 second idea and we build on that It s definitely a group thing adding that When people tell me what one of our songs means I say Yep you re right I m not gonna dash their dreams 11 Selfish is a critique on trendies the apathetic and mean spirited and opens with a sample of the Die Hard dialogue why don t you wake up and smell what you re shovelling which the band included after watching the film and decided it fitted in really well 11 Happy was written by lead singer Jonn Penney who as Griffin explained writes really vague and about personal situations not necessarily his own He doesn t like to explain 11 Penney s lyrics on God Fodder have been described as personal and challenging 10 Kill Your Television was inspired by a sticker that Griffin purchased in Mystic Connecticut a few years prior to the song s release whilst visiting with friends in Boston I had the sticker on my bass while we were in the process of writing a song which had nothing to do with television and Penney saw it and thought it would be a good title We like slogans you don t forget them So the lyrics were rewritten and the song became about television 11 The sneering cryptic tag line which ends the song soap for sore eyes is a reference to the band s guitarist Rat who watched every soap opera on television much to Penney s disgust 11 Release edit The Grey Cell Green video caused a real public reaction but it was the infamous T shirt campaign that really got everybody s attention Until that time it hadn t jumped up and grabbed people by the throat Billboard expelling the album s gradual success build in the United States 12 God Fodder was released on 1 April 1991 by the band s own Sony Music imprint Furtive Records in the UK whilst in the United States the album was released by Columbia Records another Sony label on 2 July 1991 The band played concerts throughout the year worldwide in promotion of God Fodder playing alongside bands such as amongst others Mega City Four Senseless Things and Jesus Jones The band also appeared twice on Top of the Pops in the UK In as early as July 1991 the NME noted that the band were along with The KLF Seal The La s and Electronic making their mark in the United States 13 Several singles were released from the album Kill Your Television was released in the UK in 1990 before the album was recorded and in 1992 in the United States It reached number 53 in the UK Singles Chart and number 1 in the UK Independent Singles Chart 14 The second single Until You Find Out was also released in 1990 and reached number 51 in the UK charts 14 The first official single from the album and first Sony release Happy was the third single and reaching number 16 in the UK singles chart in March 1991 and number 11 in the US Modern Rock Tracks chart 14 Trust was the final single released in the UK reaching number 21 in September 1991 14 whilst Grey Cell Green was the final American single reaching number 24 in the US Modern Rock Tracks chart The album was a commercial success reaching number 4 on the UK Albums Chart and spending five weeks on the chart in total 14 In the United States the album entered the Top Heetseekrs Albums chart at number 9 in October 1991 and ultimately graduated when it entered and peaked at number 91 on the official Billboard 200 chart in February 1992 12 The album s gradual success in the United States lead to Billboard magazine including it in their list of the Popular Uprising Class of 92 in June 1992 where Columbia sales director John Doyce explained they d played and toured a lot of the alternative markets and we got a real strong sense that the album would continue to sell 12 The magazine credited the album s gradual stateside success largely to the band s T shirt campaign 12 referring to the band s own distinctive T shirts with over 86 different designs being produced within three years 1987 1990 On 1 February 1992 God Fodder was certified Silver by the British Phonographic Industry BPI for sales of over 60 000 copies in the United Kingdom 15 16 It has been reported that over 60 000 copies were sold in the first week alone 17 In the United States the album has sold over 400 000 copies 17 As of 2013 God Fodder is estimated to have sold around 500 000 copies worldwide 18 Reception and legacy editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllmusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 19 Sounds nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 20 Trouser Press favourable 10 The album was praised by most of the major music magazines upon its release and retrospective commentary on the album has also been generally favourable with some critics citing it as their best album Nitsuh Abebe of Allmusic rated the album four stars out of five saying it was arguably the band s best album and adding that although the album may not be groundbreaking it was certainly solid 1 The reviewer also said the album was consistently satisfying and mentioned how the band s light and hooky sound was enough to put quite a distance between their oeuvre and that of the average grebo or punk band 1 Trouser Press were also favourable praising the album s strong start and saying that derivative to the core the Neds pinch bits from a random selection of English bands Wedding Present Icicle Works New Order etc but they do so with such breathless enthusiasm that it suits the good natured cheesiness of the whole endeavor 10 At the end of 1991 several magazines included the album on their lists of the top 50 albums of the year NME ranked it 23rd 21 whilst Select ranked it 39th 22 Kill Your Television had already ranked at number 37 in NME s list of the top 50 singles of 1990 23 whilst it also ranked at number 26 in the same year s edition of the Festive Fifty a poll of the top 50 songs of the year assembled by John Peel listeners 24 The Morning Call referred to the record as a fine album 11 In 2013 Kyle Ryan of The A V Club spoke of how Grey Cell Green and Happy were jams back in the day and how the latter songs remained one of his all time favourite songs 25 Less favourable to God Fodder was Pitchfork Media s Chris Ott saying that Ned Atomic Dustbin s shook their long on top dos to the prevailing beat namely shoegaze A pinch of Swervedriver a touch of Ride the cheesy Peavey distortion of a thousand bad L A bands and some timely looks 2 In 2003 the website included it at number 10 in their list of Castoffs and Cutouts The Top 50 Most Common Used CDs 2 In 2010 Magnet magazine ranked the song Happy at number 11 in their list of 120 Reasons to Live a list celebrating the 1990s underground music that was aired on MTV s alternative music show 120 Minutes in the description for the song s entry the magazine cited God Fodder as their best album and spoke of how its double bass approach helped the band survive the dominance of grunge music saying that despite there being a lot to dislike about the band in retrospect such as their terrible style of baggy clothes dreadlocks a vaguely secondhand hippie punk look having a guitarist named Rat a whimsical album title in God Fodder and two bass players the latter is what helped make the band unique Actually the double bass approach is what elevated Ned s Atomic Dustbin above the grunge floodwaters that drowned just about every other U K band in the early 90s Ned s pairing of Husker Du style distorted guitars with an overzealous rhythm section was successful for the duration of one album 1991 debut God Fodder was loaded with singles with Happy and Grey Cell Green among the best efforts at bridging the gap between Britpop and American punk influences Ned s Atomic Dustbin went on to record two more albums but God Fodder is its classic the band reunited to perform the album in its entirety in London last year 26 Live concerts edit nbsp The band playing God Fodder at O2 Shepherd s Bush Empire in 2009 Having reformed in 2009 all five original members of the band played God Fodder from start to finish in London on 19 December 2009 at the O2 Shepherd s Bush Empire 27 After playing the album the band played other tracks from their catalogue 17 One of the band s classic T shirt designs was sold at the show s merchandise stand for the first time since the God Fodder era 17 The concert was critically acclaimed 28 The band played the entirety of the album again at the HMV Institute in Birmingham on 25 September 2010 as part of the institute s reopening 29 Interviewed prior to the Birmingham concert Penney stated that back when we first toured God Fodder we didn t play in Birmingham and that s something we ll be very happy to address all these years later We can t wait to christen the new venue and set a new bar takings record 29 Speaking to The Birmingham Mail Penney said we played the whole of God Fodder at Shepherd s Bush in London last Christmas and we thought it would be nice to do it in the Midlands as well It captures that moment in the 90s when the indie scene in Birmingham and the Black Country was buzzing It s quite a fast little album and it s over fairly quickly so we ll come back on and do a Best of set 30 Track listing editAll songs written by Ned s Atomic Dustbin Kill Your Television 2 59 Less Than Useful 4 05 Selfish 3 54 Grey Cell Green 3 47 Cut Up 3 07 Throwing Things 3 24 Capital Letters 2 55 Happy 3 59 Your Complex 2 38 Nothing Like 2 41 Until You Find Out 3 10 You 2 03 What Gives My Son 31 2 48Personnel editAdapted from the liner notes Dan Dan The Fast Drumming Man Alex Plays One Bass Mat The Other Rat Does The Guitar and Jonn Sings 3 Charts editChart performance for God Fodder Chart 1991 1992 PeakpositionAustralian Albums ARIA 32 95UK Albums OCC 33 4US Billboard 200 34 91References edit a b c d e God Fodder Ned s Atomic Dustbin Songs Reviews Credits AllMusic AllMusic a b c d e f Pitchfork Castoffs and Cutouts The Top 50 Most Common Used CDs 26 December 2003 Archived from the original on 26 December 2003 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Ned s Atomic Dustbin God Fodder 1991 Theend co il Archived from the original on 29 March 2004 Retrieved 18 February 2012 Jzwickel 2 July 1991 God Fodder Ned s Atomic Dustbin Rhapsody com Retrieved 18 February 2012 a b c Ned s Atomic Dustbin Biography amp History AllMusic AllMusic a b Liner notes Bite Ned s Atomic Dustbin Songs Reviews Credits AllMusic AllMusic Are You Normal Ned s Atomic Dustbin Songs Reviews Credits AllMusic AllMusic nedsatomicdustbin MUDKISS FANZINE Mudkiss com Retrieved 24 December 2021 a b c d e f g Ned s Atomic Dustbin Trouserpress com Retrieved 24 December 2021 a b c d e f g Ned s Atomic Dustbin Sweeps Group Efforts into Song Writing Articles mcall com Retrieved 24 December 2021 a b c d Inc Nielsen Business Media 20 June 1992 Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help Tobler John 1992 NME Rock N Roll Years 1st ed London Reed International Books Ltd p 486 CN 5585 a b c d e NED S ATOMIC DUSTBIN full Official Chart History Official Charts Company OfficialCharts com Certified Awards Archived from the original on 1 May 2013 Retrieved 17 October 2016 Rockmine Today In Music Rockmine com Retrieved 24 December 2021 a b c d Ned s Atomic Dustbin God Fodder at Shepherds Bush Empire London on 19 Dec 2009 Last fm NED S ATOMIC DUSTBIN London Shepards Bush Empire 22 November 2013 The Final Word God Fodder Ned s Atomic Dustbin Songs Reviews Credits AllMusic Retrieved 24 December 2021 Peart Andy 30 March 1991 Get Stuffed Sounds p 39 1991 NME NME 10 October 2016 Select End Of Year Lists Rocklistmusic co uk Retrieved 24 December 2021 NME End Of Year Lists 1990 Rocklistmusic co uk Retrieved 24 December 2021 John Peel s Festive 50 s 1977 2003 Rocklistmusic co uk Retrieved 24 December 2021 Ned s Atomic Dustbin was more than an also ran of the early alternative era The A V Club 28 March 2013 120 Reasons To Live Ned s Atomic Dustbin Magnetmagazine com 22 June 2010 Neds Atomic Dustbin Gigs Nedsatomicdustbin com Retrieved 18 February 2012 Fix Lorne Thomson The Digital 25 March 2023 Ned s Atomic Dustbin Shepherds Bush Empire Live Review Music The Digital Fix a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Approved Ned s Atomic Dustbin God Fodder Gig Completemusicupdate com Retrieved 24 December 2021 Mail Birmingham 16 September 2010 Music Ned s Atomic Dustbin perform God Fodder at HMV Institute Ned s Atomic Dustbin God Fodder at Discogs Discogs com 6 October 1991 Retrieved 18 February 2012 Ryan Gavin 2011 Australia s Music Charts 1988 2010 PDF ed Mt Martha Victoria Australia Moonlight Publishing p 200 Official Albums Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved 1 September 2022 Ned s Atomic Dustbin Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved 1 September 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title God Fodder amp oldid 1178836926, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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