Excerpts from a Love Circus

Excerpts from a Love Circus is an album by the American musician Lisa Germano.[4][5] It was released in 1996 by 4AD.[6]

Excerpts from a Love Circus
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 9, 1996
GenreAlternative rock, dream pop, folk rock
Length51:52
Label4AD
ProducerPaul Mahern, Lisa Germano, Bill Bottrell
Lisa Germano chronology
Geek the Girl
(1994)
Excerpts from a Love Circus
(1996)
Slide
(1998)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[2]
Los Angeles Times[3]

In the United Kingdom, "Small Heads" was released as a single in August 1996, just prior to the album. Around this same time, Germano recorded an album with the members of Giant Sand under the name OP8; although originally commissioned by 4AD, the label passed on the album (Slush), which led to its release on Thirsty Ear Recordings in February 1997. In North America, a remix of "I Love a Snot" by Tchad Blake was serviced to radio and retail in April 1997. Another Germano collaboration of sorts was released later that year, when another Excerpts track, "Lovesick", was remixed by drum & bass producer The Underdog (aka Trevor Jackson, later of Playgroup), and released as a single on his Output Recordings label.

Critical reception edit

Entertainment Weekly wrote that "Germano adds trembling violins to other aural oddities, like the plinking of a toy piano and the purring of her cat ... Those quirky elements help lighten the troubled lullabies."[2] The Tucson Weekly thought that "Germano's music is dreamy, with her haunting violin and keyboards coloring the drifty, mercurial arrangements."[7]

Track listing edit

  1. "Baby on the Plane"
  2. "A Beautiful Schizophrenic/"Where's Miamo-Tutti?" by Dorothy"
  3. "Bruises"
  4. "I Love a Snot"
  5. "Forget It, It's a Mystery"
  6. "Victoria's Secret/"Just a Bad Dream" by Miamo-Tutti"
  7. "Small Heads"
  8. "We Suck"
  9. "Lovesick"
  10. "Singing to the Birds"
  11. "Messages from Sophia/"There's More Kitties in the World than Just Miamo-Tutti" by Lisa and Dorothy"
  12. "Big, Big World"
  13. "Fun Fun Fun for Everyone (Acoustic)" *
  14. "Tom, Dick and Harry" *
  15. "Messages from Sophia (Instrumental)" *

All songs were written by Lisa Germano.

Three of the album's tracks also contain interludes which feature home recordings of two of Germano's cats, Dorothy and Miamo-Tutti. Contrary to the track listing shown on the album's packaging, "Where's Miamo-Tutti?" actually appears during the first seventeen seconds of track 3. "Just a Bad Dream" begins at the 4:19 mark of track 6, and "There's More Kitties in the World than Just Miamo-Tutti" takes up roughly the last minute of track 11.

A later edition of Excerpts, re-released by 4AD in 1999, contained tracks 2-4 from the "Small Heads" single added to the end as bonus tracks (denoted above with *), but have since been removed for subsequent editions. The song "Tom, Dick and Harry" was also performed by Germano on the OP8 album Slush.

"Small Heads", "I Love A Snot" and "Lovesick" all received considerate airplay on College & Alternative radio in America as well as the UK.

Personnel edit

Kenny Aronoff, Bill Bottrell, Dane Clark, Dorothy, Emily Goethals, Glenn Hicks, John Hicks, Demian Hostetter, Mark Maher, Paul Mahern, Miamo-Tutti, Allana Redecki, Craig Ross, Josh Silbert, Jake Smith, John Strohm, Thor, Wyndham Wallace. (Individual credits were not listed.)

Credits edit

  • Produced by Paul Mahern and Lisa Germano, except track 6 produced by Bill Bottrell with assistant engineer Mark Cross.
  • Recorded and mixed at Echo Park Studio in Bloomington, IN, except track 6 recorded at Toad Hall Studio in Pasadena, CA.
  • Mastered by Greg Calbi at Masterdisk.
  • Art direction by Paul McMenamin at v23.
  • Photography by Matthew Welch.
  • Portrait by Michael Wilson.

References edit

  1. ^ "Excerpts from a Love Circus - Lisa Germano | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic" – via www.allmusic.com.
  2. ^ a b "Excerpts From a Love Circus". EW.com.
  3. ^ Rosenbluth, Jean (22 Sep 1996). "LISA GERMANO 'Excerpts From a Love Circus'". Los Angeles Times. Calendar. p. 65.
  4. ^ "Lisa Germano Biography, Songs, & Albums". AllMusic.
  5. ^ Margasak, Peter (March 27, 1997). "Lisa Germano". Chicago Reader.
  6. ^ "Lisa Germano". Trouser Press. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  7. ^ "Quick Scans (November 28 - December 4, 1996)". www.tucsonweekly.com.