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90 Bisodol (Crimond)
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
{{use dmy dates|date=January 2015}}{{use British English|date=January 2015}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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Critical reception
In a review for BBC, critic reviewer Luke Slater called the album the band's "most consistently brilliant work yet in every aspect, and another start-to-finish showcase of rare genius".WEB, Slater, Luke, Luke Slater,weblink Half Man Half Biscuit 90 Bisodol (Crimond) Review, bbc.co.uk, 29 September 2011, 16 December 2011, The Quietus called it "probably their best, certainly their most consistent album".WEB, Parkes, Taylor, Taylor Parkes,weblink Taylor Parkes on the Continuing Brilliance of Half Man Half Biscuit, thequietus.com, 26 September 2011, 16 December 2011,Track listing
{{Track listing|headline=90 Bisodol (Crimond) track listingNotes
- Bisodol is a brand of indigestion tablet WEB,weblink Bisodol Indigestion Relief, bisodol.com, 12 January 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150112032328weblink">weblink 12 January 2015, dead,
- Crimond is a village in Aberdeenshire, Scotland; whose name was adopted for a hymn tune by Jessie Seymour Irvine, most associated with a verse paraphrase of Psalm 23, "The Lord's my shepherd, I'll not want" WEB,weblink hymnary.org, Crimond, 13 February 2016,
- The alleged producer, Nelson Burt, was a nine-year-old boy (son of Albin R. Burt) who drowned in the Mersey Hurricane of 1822, and whose grave is in the churchyard of St Lawrence's Church, Stoak; as mentioned in the song "The Unfortunate Gwatkin" on the 2014 album Urge for Offal by Half Man Half Biscuit
- The song title "Something's Rotten in the Back of Iceland" parodies the line "Something is rotten in the state of Denmark", spoken by Marcellus in Shakespeare's play Hamlet, s:The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark/Act 1Scene 4. The platform.|Act 1 Scene 4]]
- The song title "Excavating Rita" parodies that of the 1980 play Educating Rita by Willy Russell.
- The song title "L'enfer c'est les autres" is a quotation from the 1944 existentialist French play Huis Clos by Jean-Paul Sartre (1905{{ndash}}1980); in English, "Hell is other people"
- "Wools" is a shortening of Woollybacks, an expression in Merseyside English which refers to people from neighbouring areas WEB,weblink Liverpool Echo, Scousers, plastic Scousers and woolybacks â here are the views of Liverpool Echo readers, 1 October 2011, 12 February 2016,
References
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{{Half Man Half Biscuit}}{{Authority control}}{{2010s-punk-rock-album-stub}}- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "90 Bisodol (Crimond)" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 9:17am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
- "90 Bisodol (Crimond)" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 9:17am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
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