1990 studio album by Mojo Nixon
Otis is the debut solo album of Mojo Nixon . Released in 1990, it featured guest appearances by John Doe of X , Country Dick Montana (Beat Farmers ), Bill Davis (Dash Rip Rock ) and Eric Roscoe Ambel (The Del-Lords ).[ 2] [ 5] [ 3]
Nixon's first album since splitting with Skid Roper , and released by Enigma Records , the album was seen as potentially Nixon's break-out album but the record label's demise due to financial issues dashed any chance of success.[ 6]
The album includes humorous commentary on targets such as soft rock ("Don Henley Must Die"), the legal profession ("Destroy All Lawyers"), politics, and Shane MacGowan 's teeth.[ 2] [ 5] Featuring a band of established musicians from other bands and produced by Jim Dickinson , the album's music was considered to be stronger than Nixon's previous releases.[ 2] [ 3]
"Destroy All Lawyers" (3:00)
"I Wanna Race Bigfoot Trucks" (3:45)
"Ain't High Falutin'" (3:16)
"Shane's Dentist" (2:04)
"Rabies Baby" (3:30)
"Put a Sex Mo-Sheen in the White House" (4:18)
"Star Spangled Mojo" (Traditional; arranged by Mojo Nixon) (1:23)
"You Can Dress 'Em Up (But You Can't Take 'Em Out)" (2:51)
"Don Henley Must Die" (4:20)
"Perry Mason of Love" (5:46)
"Took Out the Trash and Never Came Back" (4:42)
"Gonna Be a New World" (3:53)
Mojo Nixon – vocals, guitar, sheep
John Doe – bass guitar, backing vocals, monkey socks
Country Dick Montana – drums, deep vocals, zipperneck
Bill Davis – guitar, backing vocals, hatchet-ass
Eric Roscoe Ambel – guitar, backing vocals, lightbulb
Jim Spake – saxophone
Reed McCoy – trumpet
East Memphis Slim – keyboards
William C. Brown III – backing vocals
Zooty – bells
Dale Lavi - aluminum cans
Luther Dickinson – teenage guitar
Robby Turner – steel guitar
Technical
Bob Krusen – engineering, mix
Jim Dickinson – mixing
Karen Kuehn – photography
Gopher Killer – Polaroid
Rudy Tuesday – design
^ Otis at AllMusic
^ a b c d Robbins, Ira (1990) "Otis (1990) Mojo Nixon ", Entertainment Weekly , September 7, 1990. Retrieved December 8, 2014
^ a b c Gettelman, Parry (1990) "Mojo Nixon Otis ", Orlando Sentinel , November 16, 1990. Retrieved December 8, 2014
^ Christgau, Robert (1990-10-23). "Consumer Guide" . The Village Voice .
^ a b Sheridan, Dave & Robbins, Ira "Mojo Nixon ", Trouser Press . Retrieved December 8, 2014
^ Buckley, Peter (2003) The Rough Guide to Rock , Rough Guides, ISBN 978-1843531050 , p. 731
Studio albums with Skid Roper Mojo Nixon and the Toadliquors Singles