Rocket to Russia | ||||
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Studio album by Ramones | ||||
Released | November 4, 1977 | |||
Recorded | August – September 1977 at Media Sound Studios, Midtown Manhattan | |||
Genre | Punk rock | |||
Length | 31:46 (original) 43:23 (Expanded Edition) |
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Label | Sire (US & UK) Philips (Europe) |
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Producer | Tony Bongiovi, Tommy Erdelyi | |||
Professional reviews | ||||
Rhino Records Expanded Release:
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Ramones chronology | ||||
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Rocket to Russia is the third studio album by the American punk rock band The Ramones. It was released on November 4, 1977 through Sire Records. It was their last with original drummer Tommy Ramone. The album incorporates surf rock and other influences. It includes some of the Ramones' best-known songs, including "Sheena Is a Punk Rocker" and "Teenage Lobotomy". In 2003, the album was ranked number 105 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
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The album was recorded in late August 1977 at Media Sound studios in Midtown Manhattan. The cost of recording Rocket to Russia was roughly $25,000, which was significantly higher than that of the band's two previous records. At the request of guitarist Johnny Ramone, Punk Magazine editor and illustrator John Holmstrom produced the sleeve art, a cartoonish view of the world from a rocketship with a pinhead, emblematic of the band, grabbing onto it. In 1978, the album peaked at #49 on the Billboard pop albums chart, making it one of the band's most popular releases.
On June 19, 2001, Rhino Records re-released the album. In addition to remastering the tracks from the original album, it included alternate versions of album tracks as well as a B-side.
"Rockaway Beach", written by bassist Dee Dee Ramone in the style of the Beach Boys and other early rock 'n' roll bands, was written about Rockaway Beach, Queens, where Dee Dee liked to spend time. Johnny Ramone claimed that Dee Dee was the only real beachgoer in the band. Released in 1977, it was the Ramones' highest charting single in their career, hitting #66 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Rockaway Beach" has been covered by the punk rock cover band The 77's, Finnish punk rock band Ne Luumäet (in Finnish, "Hiekkaa Hietarannan"), Swedish rock band Sahara Hotnights, American punk rock band The Queers (who covered the entire Rocket to Russia album in 1994 on Rocket to Russia), Morrissey collaborator and former Polecat, Boz Boorer, Canadian rock band Deja Voodoo (also in Finnish), German punk band Die Toten Hosen on their "Alles wird vorübergehen" single, and Spanish rock band Siniestro Total (in Spanish, under the title Rock en Samil, a popular beach near their hometown Vigo in Galicia). The Argentinian band Superuva did the same with their cover Rock en Tandil, a city in the middle of the Tandilia hills.
"Surfin' Bird" is a cover of the original song by The Trashmen. "Do You Wanna Dance?" was written by Bobby Freeman in 1958, but is probably best known for a 1965 cover by the Beach Boys.
"I Don't Care", one of the first songs the band ever wrote, was originally recorded as a demo for their first album, Ramones.
The song "Cretin Hop" was inspired by Cretin Avenue in St. Paul, Minnesota, which is named after former Bishop Joseph Crétin, the Ramones noticed the name while on tour.[1] "Cretin Hop" was played in the onstage fight scene in the punk movie SLC Punk!.
"Rockaway Beach" and "Teenage Lobotomy" were released as downloadable content for the music video game Rock Band.
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