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The band's second album, Bruiseology, was released by Polydor in May 1983. During that summer, Donahue left the band and was replaced by Holly Beth Vincent, formerly of Holly and the Italians, but Vincent herself left after just two weeks and Donahue returned. [2] [3] The Waitresses split up later in 1983. [4]
Bruiseology is the second and final studio album by the American band the Waitresses, released in 1983. [1] [2] The album was recorded amidst personnel conflict; the band disbanded a year later. [3] Chris Butler intended for the album's lyrics and themes to be darker than the band's earlier work. [4] The album was coproduced by Hugh Padgham. [5]
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"I Know What Boys Like" is a song by the Waitresses, written by guitarist Chris Butler in 1978, while he was still a member of the rock band Tin Huey. [ 2 ] It was recorded by Butler and released as a single in 1980, but beyond some club success, it did not appear on any charts.
AllMusic critic Ben Tausig, writing retrospectively, said that the album "was a unique and fairly important moment in early-'80s new wave", and noted that "lead singer Patty Donahue's singing ranged from a playful sexiness on the well-known hit "I Know What Boys Like" to a half-talk, half-yell with shades of post-punk groups like Gang of Four and the Raincoats on 'Pussy Strut' and 'Go On.'
Implying that one Latina could be a copy-and-paste version of any other Latina can do a world of damage in more ways than one. First off, there's the phrase we hear time and time again: Latinos ...
20th Century Masters – The Millennium Collection: The Best of the Waitresses is a compilation album from the Waitresses.Released by Polydor Records in 2003, it consists of the same tracks and uses the same running order as a previous compilation, The Best of the Waitresses (1990), minus the songs "Jimmy Tomorrow" (from Wasn't Tomorrow Wonderful?, 1982), "The Smartest Person I Know" (from I ...
During the recording of the second and final Waitresses' album Bruiseology, Donahue left the band and was replaced temporarily by Holly Beth Vincent before Donahue rejoined soon afterward. [8] Donahue was sought personally by Alice Cooper to duet with him on the single "I Like Girls". Cooper exuberantly told an interviewer: "I'd be driving in ...