Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  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. Album Credits. Producers Jim Rondinelli. Writers Bill Ferguson, Jim Ferguson (Lotion), Rob Youngberg & 1 more.

  3. Jack Rabid reviews Lotion's four-song Agnew Funeral EP (1995), which in the U.S. was released between full Isaac and Nobody's Cool. By the time of his review, Nobody's Cool was already out in the U.K., so while writing about the EP, Rabid took the opportunity to praise the album. However, he got things precisely wrong when he called that second ...

  4. The name of Lotion’s first album is Full Isaac, which besides getting instant screams of recognition from Love Boat rerun watchers everywhere, shows an attentive nostalgia at work — not to mention some dream of an endless cruise, upon which Nobody’s Cool is the next leg of the band’s creative itinerary. As beneath the austerities of twelvetone music may lurk some shameless piece of ...

  5. 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
  6. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1997 CD release of "Nobody's Cool" on Discogs.

  7. To promote the release of full Isaac, Lotion toured America and Europe with Pavement, Throwing Muses, and Mercury Rev. In 1995, the band released a self-titled EP on Big Cat Records, with a second EP, The Agnew Funeral E.P., recorded the next year. In 1996, Lotion released their second album, Nobody's Cool, [1] with liner notes by Thomas Pynchon.

  1. People also search for