From Wikipedia - Reading time: 8 min
| Palomine | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 2 November 1992 | |||
| Studio | Sound Enterprise (Weesp) | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 49:12 | |||
| Label | ||||
| Producer |
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| Bettie Serveert chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Palomine | ||||
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Palomine is the debut studio album by Dutch indie rock band Bettie Serveert. It was released on 2 November 1992 by Brinkman Records and Guernica, and by Matador Records in the United States the following year.
Palomine was released on 2 November 1992 by Brinkman Records in Benelux and by the 4AD subsidiary label Guernica in the United Kingdom.[3][4] Upon its release, the album charted at number 43 in the Netherlands.[5] In the United States, it was issued by Matador Records on 7 January 1993.[3][6] Three singles were released from Palomine: "Tom Boy" and "Palomine" in 1992,[7] the second of which reached number 122 on the UK Singles Chart,[8] and "Kid's Allright" in 1993.[7]
On 7 July 2023, Palomine was reissued by Matador for the album's 30th anniversary.[9] The reissue reached a new peak of number 30 in the Netherlands,[5] while also reaching number 177 on the Belgian Flanders albums chart.[10]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| CD Review | |
| Entertainment Weekly | A−[2] |
| NME | 6/10[13] |
| PopMatters | 8/10[14] |
| Q | |
| Rolling Stone | |
| The Rolling Stone Album Guide | |
| Spin Alternative Record Guide | 8/10[18] |
| Uncut | 8/10[19] |
Q reviewer Martin Aston commented that Palomine "is produced with a bar band intimacy that amplifies the sparse, roaming spaces at the heart of the music", and that "Carol van Dijk has a vibrant, husky voice, capable of plaintive, precocious passion and gutsy ferverishness".[15] Stephanie Zacharek, writing for CD Review, said that as a vocalist, van Dijk "taps into" the subtleties of her "austere" lyrics and "brings home, in words, the sorts of things that are otherwise best communicated by a wry smile or the flutter of eyelashes."[12] Spin's Jim Greer stated that the album juxtaposes "Van Dijk's suspiciously accurate Long Island-inflected langour with the slow, intense sloppiness of the band to form one glorious mess of sound", while also finding Bettie Serveert's songwriting remarkably mature for an indie rock band.[1] In The New York Times, Jon Pareles wrote that the band's songs "echo the clear-cut melodies and verbal directness of Neil Young and the garage-rock scruffiness of his collegiate-rock heirs, like Dinosaur Jr."[20]
Palomine placed at number 15 in The Village Voice's 1993 year-end Pazz & Jop critics' poll.[21] Robert Christgau, the poll's creator, awarded it a "two-star honorable mention" and remarked, "by the time the tunes grow on you, you'll be wondering why the songs never get where they're going".[22]
All lyrics are written by Carol van Dijk, except where noted; all music is composed by Bettie Serveert (Herman Bunskoeke, Van Dijk, Berend Dubbe, and Peter Visser), except where noted
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Leg" | 6:11 |
| 2. | "Palomine" | 4:09 |
| 3. | "Kid's Allright" | 4:20 |
| 4. | "Brain-Tag" | 6:26 |
| 5. | "Tom Boy" | 4:21 |
| 6. | "Under the Surface" | 4:17 |
| 7. | "Balentine" | 4:11 |
| 8. | "This Thing Nowhere" | 3:18 |
| 9. | "Healthy Sick" (lyrics and music by Lou Barlow) | 2:23 |
| 10. | "Sundazed to the Core" | 7:05 |
| 11. | "Palomine (Small)" | 2:31 |
| Total length: | 49:12 | |
Notes
Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[24]
Bettie Serveert
Production
Design
| Chart (1992–1993) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[5] | 43 |
| Dutch Alternative Albums (Dutch Charts)[5] | 2 |
| Chart (2023) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[10] | 177 |
| Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[5] | 30 |
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