Flop - Flop and the Fall of the Mopsqueezer!

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Album Details

Title: Flop and the Fall of the Mopsqueezer!
Artist: Flop
Release Date: 1/1992
Label: Frontier
UPCs: 018663105116, 018663105123, 018663105147, 018663464121, 018663464145, 790168339967
Genre: Rock
Styles: Alternative Pop/Rock, Indie Rock, Punk-Pop, Alternative/Indie Rock
Moods: Bright, Playful, Brash, Energetic, Amiable/Good-Natured, Bittersweet, Brooding, Complex, Humorous, Innocent, Intense, Ironic, Lively, Melancholy, Passionate, Quirky, Raucous, Tense/Anxious, Witty, Rousing, Wry
Total Copies: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. I Told a Lie
  2. Anne
  3. Glue Factory
  4. Tomato Paste
  5. Entropy
  6. Big Sky
  7. Hello
  8. Ugly Girl Lover
  9. You Would Be Right Excerpt
  10. Zeus My Master
  11. Asthenia
  12. Sister Smile
  13. Parasite
  14. Morton the Venereologist
  15. Circus Freak
  16. B

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1992CDFrontier
1992CDFrontier34641-2
------CDFrontier
------CDFrontier31051

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

More than most outside the city would have realized in the early '90s, Seattle's music scene was all over the place, as this delightfully brash and fun debut album shows. Like a more punk-edged Cheap Trick (though certainly Willoughby can't measure up to Robin Zander's amazing pipes, but has a good set of his own), Flop takes pop hooks and loud riffs to the masses with good humor and energetic playing. With production mostly by Young Fresh Fellows/Fastbacks guru Kurt Bloch, who obviously knew a good time when he saw it, Mopsqueezer skips from one highlight to the next. Including the Kinks' "Big Sky" as a cover choice is actually a touch misleading -- Village Green Preservation Society this isn't, either as a concept or as quite so mannered a style, though it's still a fine romp through a solid Ray Davies number that's not out of place. There's as much metal riffing as melody at play on Mopsqueezer, it's just that the latter always keeps the former in check. Johnson is the secret weapon of the band, both a good timekeeper and able to fire in some sly flash here and there without stealing the show. Check out his steady, solid punch on the heavy groove of "Morton the Venereologist" or the galloping rhythms on "Ugly Girl Lover" and "Parasite" (not a Kiss cover). As a guitar team, Willoughby and Campbell give out all the chunky feedback one could want without sounding at all like they want to be new Pearl Jam members, even pulling off some great psych guitar squalls on "Asthenia." Certain Willoughby himself sounds far too open and cheerful to stereotype, even when some songs can obliquely address deeper subjects than expected. Certainly most grunge-gloom mongers wouldn't include the varying speed fragment "You Would Be Right" just for kicks. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Bill CampbellGuitar
Chris HanzsekMastering, Engineer, Digital Pre-Mastering
Doug ErbPackaging
Ed FotheringhamCover Art, Cover Design
John GoldenMastering
Kurt BlochVocals, Vocals (Background), Vocal Harmony, Engineer
L. StringfellowPiano
Nate JohnsonDrums
Paul SchurrVocals, Bass
Rusty WilloughbyVocals, Composer, Guitar