Bad English | |
Type: | Studio album |
Artist: | Bad English |
Cover: | Bad_English_(album).jpg |
Released: | [1] |
Studio: |
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Genre: |
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Length: | 62:10 |
Label: | Epic |
Producer: | Richie Zito |
Next Title: | Backlash |
Next Year: | 1991 |
Bad English is the debut studio album by British/American rock band Bad English. It was released in on 26 June 1989.
The album was a massive success, especially because of the No. 1 single "When I See You Smile".[2] That single was certified gold by the RIAA while the album was certified platinum. Aside from that song, the album had two other top 40 hits, "Price of Love" and "Possession", which peaked at No. 5 and No. 21, respectively.[3]
The album received generally positive reviews.
RPMs reviewer David Spodek called it "an LP full of enough hard driving rock and roll and power chords to please any AOR MD" and named "Forget Me Not" as the best cut.[4] Rock Hard gave an extremely positive review, and considered it the "best AOR album of the past six months". Pan-European magazine Music & Media found that the album full of "well-balanced, solid, melodic hard rock" and the "band seem to be at their best on the slower numbers where the quality of the hooks indicate that they could be the next big thing."[5]
AllMusic's Dan Heilman gave the album four stars, saying, "Amid some tailor-made power ballads lurks some decent hard rock."
LouderSound writer Dave Everley gave the album four stars, explaining the rating with "Bad English marked the end of an era, but what a last hurrah it was". Nonetheless, in 2016, "When I See You Smile" was ranked by LouderSound as the 10th-worst power ballad ever written.[6]
Musician reviewer J. D. Considine wrote simply: "Grammar is the least of their problems."[7]
"Best of What I Got" is featured during the credits to the 1989 film Tango & Cash.
Bad English
Production