Fear Not the Obvious is the first album by the Yayhoos, released in 2001.[2]
“Bottle and a Bible” was included on the Ace Records compilation of songs played on Bob Dylan‘s Theme Time Radio Hour.[citation needed]
Production
The album was recorded and produced by band member Eric Ambel at drummer Terry Anderson’s father’s barn in rural North Carolina.[3] It was released about five years after it was recorded.[4]
Critical reception
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Robert Christgau | |
No Depression wrote that the band sound “like every band that ever staggered through three sets a night for all the beer they could drink.”[7] The Washington Post wrote that “the Yayhoos go for the most reliable basics of rock ‘n’ roll — a whomping 4/4 beat, lyrics full of barroom jokes and pick-up lines, noisy guitars, three chords and a cloud of dust.”[8] Exclaim! wrote: “It’s actually a little unnerving how easily Baird and Ambel are able to update the classic Faces vibe when contemporaries like the Black Crowes seem to labour over it.”[9] Greil Marcus described the sound as “a foursome with bad teeth in a fearless stumble into the Faces’ A Nod Is as Good as a Wink … to a Blind Horse.”[10]
Track listing
- “What Are We Waiting For” (Eric Ambel, Terry Anderson) – 2:57
- “Get Right with Jesus” (Dan Baird) – 4:17
- “Monkey with a Gun” (Ambel) – 3:29
- “I Can Give You Everything” (Anderson, Anderson) – 3:08
- “Bottle and a Bible” (Anderson, Baird) – 3:33
- “For Cryin’ Out Loud” (Keith Christopher) – 4:15
- “Oh! Chicago” (Baird) – 4:19
- “Wicked World” (Baird) – 5:08
- “Baby I Love You” (Ambel) – 4:00
- “Hunt You Down” (Anderson) – 3:20
- “Hankerin'” (Baird) – 3:48
- “Dancing Queen” (Benny Andersson, Stig Anderson, Björn Ulvaeus) – 4:23
References
- ^ “Fear Not The Obvious”. Bloodshot Records. December 20, 2013.
- ^ “The Yayhoos Biography & History”. AllMusic.
- ^ Wurster, Jon (September 26, 2001). “Fear Not the Yayhoos”. Indy Week.
- ^ “Declarations of Independents”. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. July 7, 2001.
- ^ “AllMusic review”. AllMusic. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
- ^ “The Yayhoos”. Robert Christgau.
- ^ “Yayhoos – Fear Not the Obvious”. No Depression. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
- ^ “The Yayhoos”. The Washington Post.
- ^ “Yayhoos Fear Not the Obvious”. Exclaim!.
- ^ “Real Life Rock Top 10”. Salon. June 12, 2001.