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  1. Nobody's Cool is the second studio album by Lotion, released in March 1996. [2]Thomas Pynchon writing the album's liner notes drew attention; at the time, after "the press registered a fair amount of amazement" at this development, the New York magazine quoted Rob Youngberg as having said "We wanted him to do [the liner notes], so we kept hinting...

  2. The Shins. Released. 2001 — US. CD —. Album, Enhanced. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Nobody's Cool by Lotion. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

    • (32)
    • Rock
    • 74
    • Indie Rock
  3. Here is the band’s current version of events: They had, in fact, met Pynchon, but they did so through his accountant, who happened to be the mother of Lotion’s drummer, Rob Youngberg. She gave Pynchon an advance copy of Lotion’s album “Nobody’s Cool,” and he liked it well enough; at any rate, he agreed to write the liner notes.

  4. Nobody’s Cool Lotion. Released March 1996. Nobody’s Cool Tracklist. 1. Dear Sir Lyrics. 2. The New Timmy Lyrics (Missing Lyrics) 3. The Sad Part ...

  5. And if you like Nobody's Cool or Lotion's third full-length, The Telephone Album (1998), or both, that's great. They're fine and fun. They're fine and fun. But they bring what can comfortably be called the rock, even the pop-rock, whereas the band's debut, full Isaac (1994), delivers stranger, less easily identified, and longer-lasting goods.

  6. Nobody's Cool, an Album by Lotion. Released in September 1995 on spinART (catalog no. spart 46 / 9 24643-2; CD). Genres: Indie Rock, Alternative Rock. Rated #1416 in the best albums of 1995. Featured peformers: Bill Ferguson (performer), Jim Ferguson (performer), Rob Youngberg (performer), Tony Zajkowski (performer), Jim Rondinelli (producer, recording engineer, mixing), Bob Ludwig (mastering ...

  7. trouserpress.com › reviews › lotionLotion | Trouser Press

    In a stroke of extraordinary collegiate luck, reclusive novelist Thomas Pynchon took a shine to Lotion, and wound up visiting the studio and writing the liner notes to Nobody’s Cool. To the band’s inestimable credit, his three paragraphs of prosaic musing is the record’s least imaginative and involving component.

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