Will Records
2000
Debutante
About This Album
Although the '90s were the Age of Irony, nobody really wanted irony from their rock stars, especially if it was done as skillfully as Urge Overkill. In Nirvana's wake, American rock fans wanted to know that their bands really, earnestly meant it, and you never quite knew whether Urge Overkill was putting you on. Of course, their notoriously lush lifestyle didn't help, and eventually did the band in. In 1999, Nash Kato picked up the pieces and began working on his solo debut, Debutante, which after some delay finally appeared in the spring of 2000. Kato decided to pattern the record after his one near-hit, Saturation -- so, apart from the self-pitying title track, there's none of the darkness of Exit the Dragon, nor is there any reference to Urge's implosion. It's all big, glossy hard rock, complete with a self-conscious sense of humor and an immersion in hipster pop culture. The powerful, hooky opener "Zooey Suicide" makes this seem like a good idea, but by the second song, the charm wears thin. Sure, Urge Overkill was always about style and attitude above substance, but they had the hooks, looks, and persona to pull it off more convincingly than a solo artist -- especially one who surrounds himself with overpowering female backing vocalists.
Track List (try tracks 1,3,6,7 and 9)

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