Starting Over (Raspberries album)

Starting Over is the fourth and final studio album by the 1970s power pop band Raspberries. It peaked at #143 on the Billboard pop album chart in 1974. The LP generated the #18 Billboard pop single "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," while a second single, "Cruisin' Music", did not chart. This was the first album by the Raspberries to feature songs with profanity. Those songs were “Starting Over”, which featured the word "fucking" once, and the song “Party’s Over”, which featured the word "shit" twice.

Starting Over
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 16, 1974
RecordedRecord Plant Studios, New York City
Genre
Length40:00
LabelCapitol
ProducerJimmy Ienner
Raspberries chronology
Side 3
(1973)
Starting Over
(1974)
Raspberries' Best
(1976)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Tom HullA−[2]
The Village VoiceA−[3]

Background

Stylistically, Starting Over represented a more aggressive arena rock/hard rock sound than previous albums in a way reminiscent of The Who, which was one of the groups' biggest influences. The album also included softer ballads such as "Rose Coloured Glasses" and "Cry".[4]

Starting Over featured a new line-up with Michael McBride (drums), who had drummed with Carmen and Bryson in their previous band in the late '60s, Cyrus Erie, and Scott McCarl (bass, vocals). Drummer Jim Bonfanti and bassist Dave Smalley had left the band the previous year.

Bruce Springsteen's drummer Max Weinberg has said that he based his early drum style (particularly on the Springsteen album Darkness on the Edge of Town) on Raspberries drummer Michael McBride's work in this album,[5] while Springsteen himself has also mentioned several times in live performances that the title track is one of the greatest pop songs ever written.

John Lennon, a Raspberries fan, particularly liked the song "Overnight Sensation." He was present for part of the recording of the Starting Over LP and, although not credited on the LP, is rumored to have assisted with the mix, including "Overnight Sensation."[6]

Critic Mark Deming of AllMusic praised the album as "a fine farewell from one of the best American pop bands of their era, though they didn't know it would be their last album when they were making it."[4]

This album was re-released on CD as part of Power Pop Volume 2, which also contains their album Side 3.

Songs

Music journalist Ken Sharp rated the title track as the Raspberries' 9th best song, describing it as "Raspberries do Elton, with sublime vocals."[7] Classic Rock History critic Brian Kachejian rated it as the band's 4th best song, noting that the piano riff has some similarities to Elton John's "Tiny Dancer".[8] This was also Axl Rose's favorite Raspberries song.[7] Carmen said that he wrote it as a song about a relationship but it could be taken as a reference to the revised band and a new beginning for it.[9] Carmen also said that it had the best ending of any song he had written.[9]

Both Ultimate Classic Rock critic Dave Swanson and Kachejian rated "I Don't Know What I Want" as being among the Raspberries' Top 10 songs.[10][8] Swanson said it was "probably the band's heaviest moment" with lyrics that "perfectly capture youthful frustration."[10] Kachejian noted some similarity to the Who's "Won't Get Fooled Again", especially in the intro.[8] Old Time Music critic Joseph L. Hollen also rated it among the Raspberries' top 10 songs but said it "is a decent enough song but has far too much pretense about it."[11]

Guitarist Wally Bryson wrote the song "Party's Over" and said that he included a veiled reference to Smalley and Bonfanti leaving.[9] He said that "I had to. I didn't want to. It really broke my heart."[9] Carmen called "Party's Over" "Wally's autobiographical three-chord rocker."[9]

McCarl rated "Play On", which he co-wrote with Eric Carmen, as the 5th greatest power pop song.[7] He said that "Eric and I wrote this one nose to nose. All I had was the title, the opening riff and a couple of lines to kick it off, and look at it now! It's everything I'd hoped to bring to the new band. I give it the goose-bump test from time to time, and it still passes!"[7] Sharp rated it as the Raspberries' 8th best song, calling it "the perfect caustic marriage of Scott McCarl's caustic Lennon to Eric's sugar-sweet McCartney, and what a bridge!"[7]

Track listing

  1. "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)" (Carmen) – 5:34 / Lead vocal: Carmen
  2. "Play On" (Carmen, McCarl) – 3:01 / Lead vocal: McCarl
  3. "Party's Over" (Bryson) – 3:14 / Lead vocal: Bryson
  4. "I Don't Know What I Want" (Carmen) – 4:13 / Lead vocal: Carmen
  5. "Rose Coloured Glasses" (McCarl) – 3:38 / Lead vocal: McCarl
  6. "All Through the Night" (Carmen, McBride) – 4:30 / Lead vocal: Carmen
  7. "Cruisin Music" (Carmen) – 3:09 / Lead vocal: Carmen
  8. "I Can Hardly Believe You're Mine" (Carmen, McCarl) – 3:34 / Lead vocal: Carmen
  9. "Cry" (Carmen, McCarl) – 2:41 / Lead vocal: McCarl
  10. "Hands on You" (Bryson, McCarl) – 2:22 / Lead vocal: Bryson and McCarl
  11. "Starting Over" (Carmen) – 4:10 / Lead vocal: Carmen

Timings and credits taken from the original Capitol issue (ST-11329).

Charts

Chart (1974) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[12] 72
United States (Billboard 200) 143

Band members

  • Eric Carmen — vocals, rhythm guitar, piano
  • Wally Bryson — vocals, lead guitar
  • Scott McCarl — vocals, bass
  • Michael McBride — drums

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Hull, Tom (April 1975). "The Rekord Report: Second Card". Overdose. Retrieved June 26, 2020 via tomhull.com.
  3. Christgau, Robert (November 21, 1974). "Consumer Guide (50)". The Village Voice. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  4. "Starting over - the Raspberries | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic.
  5. Let There Be Drums Vol 3: The 70s liner notes
  6. "Raspberries Rickenbackers". Ricksource. Retrieved 2023-04-02.
  7. Borack, John M.; Sharp, Ken (2007). Shake Some Action: The Ultimate Guide to Power Pop. Not Lame. pp. 36–37, 176. ISBN 9780979771408.
  8. Kachejian, Brian (29 April 2020). "Top 10 Raspberries Songs". Classic Rock History. Retrieved 2023-04-03.
  9. Carmen, Eric (2005). Raspberries Greatest (album liner notes). Capitol.
  10. Swanson, Dave (August 11, 2013). "Top 10 Raspberries Songs". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 2023-04-03.
  11. Hollen, Joseph L. (March 30, 2023). "Top 10 Raspberries Songs". Old Time Music. Retrieved 2023-04-06.
  12. Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 246. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
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