Home
Uh-Huh [LP]
Barnes and Noble
Uh-Huh [LP]
Current price: $17.99
![Uh-Huh [LP]](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0602547843210_p0_v2_s600x595.jpg)
![Uh-Huh [LP]](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0602547843210_p0_v2_s600x595.jpg)
Barnes and Noble
Uh-Huh [LP]
Current price: $17.99
Size: CD
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Since
American Fool
illustrated that
John Cougar
was becoming an actual songwriter, it's only proper that he reclaimed his actual last name,
Mellencamp
, for the follow-up,
Uh-Huh
. After all, now that he had success, he wanted to be taken seriously, and
reflects that in its portraits of brokenhearted life in the Midwest and its rumbling undercurrent of despair. Although his lyrics still have the tendency to be a little too vague, they are more effective here than ever before, as is his music; he might not have changed his style at all -- it's still a fusion of
the Stones
and
Springsteen
-- except that he now knows how to make it his own.
runs out of steam toward the end, but the first half -- with the dynamic rocker
"Crumblin' Down,"
his best protest song,
"Pink Houses,"
the punky
"Authority Song,"
the melancholy
"Warmer Place to Sleep,"
and the garage rocker
"Play Guitar"
-- makes the record his first terrific album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
American Fool
illustrated that
John Cougar
was becoming an actual songwriter, it's only proper that he reclaimed his actual last name,
Mellencamp
, for the follow-up,
Uh-Huh
. After all, now that he had success, he wanted to be taken seriously, and
reflects that in its portraits of brokenhearted life in the Midwest and its rumbling undercurrent of despair. Although his lyrics still have the tendency to be a little too vague, they are more effective here than ever before, as is his music; he might not have changed his style at all -- it's still a fusion of
the Stones
and
Springsteen
-- except that he now knows how to make it his own.
runs out of steam toward the end, but the first half -- with the dynamic rocker
"Crumblin' Down,"
his best protest song,
"Pink Houses,"
the punky
"Authority Song,"
the melancholy
"Warmer Place to Sleep,"
and the garage rocker
"Play Guitar"
-- makes the record his first terrific album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine