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Fruitcake (album)

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Fruitcake
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 6, 1996
Studio
  • Tracks Studio
  • Cinema Audio
Genre
Length73:18
Label
ProducerRobin Rivera
Eraserheads chronology
Fruitcake EP
(1996)
Fruitcake
(1996)
Bananatype
(1997)
Eraserheads studio album chronology
Cutterpillow
(1995)
Fruitcake
(1996)
Sticker Happy
(1997)
Singles from Fruitcake
  1. "Fruitcake"
    Released: November 1996

Fruitcake (stylized fRUiTCaKe) is the fourth studio album by the Philippine alternative rock band Eraserheads, released on December 6, 1996 by BMG Records (Pilipinas), Inc.

A Christmas concept album recorded in English, it tells the story of a little girl’s journey through Fruitcake Heights. It was accompanied by a storybook, released the following year. Like the band's previous albums, Fruitcake became a commercial success, but received mixed reviews.

Concept

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The album was inspired by the Beatles album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967).[1] It tells the story of a young girl named Frannie Wei who runs away from home with her dog Shadow. She finds herself in Fruitcake Heights, a town ruled by a group of people called the X-mas Comm. Frannie meets its eclectic residents such as the Gatekeeper, the Fabulous Baker Boy, the Lord of the Rhum, and the Carol Kings (the band’s alter egos).

The X-mas Comm. had ordered the Carol Kings to play the same Christmas carols every year. However, the latter had recorded some new material stuffed inside a music box which they are planning to play to the Skid Kids outside Fruitcake Heights. They head out of town before realizing that they left the music box, so they return to Fruitcake Heights, where they find out that its residents had contracted a contagious virus called Monovirus. With Frannie Wei’s help, they resolve to find the music box which also has the cure for the virus.[2]

Songs

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All songs in Fruitcake were written in English. Local critics found several Beatles references in the album, such as the end of "Fruit Fairy" referencing the 1967 song "A Day in the Life".[2][3][4][5][6] It also drew comparisons to the Smashing Pumpkins,[2][4] Oasis,[3][4] Pixies,[3] the Smiths,[3] and XTC.[3]

The album features bassist Buddy Zabala’s first written compositions for the band, “Fruit Fairy” and “The Fabulous Baker Boy”, as well as three piano interludes: “Shadow Boxes Accountants”, “Shadow Reads the News Today, Oh Boy”, and “shadow@buttholesurfs.com”. “Lord of the Rhum” was performed by guitarist Marcus Adoro, who does an Iggy Pop impression.[2] The song “Lightyears” features a string section conducted by Mel Villena.[2] It was later covered by Yolanda Moon in 2020 for Pop Machine the Album. "Christmas Party" has disco elements,[3] and was later covered by SB19 in 2022 to commemorate the band's Huling El Bimbo reunion concert.[7]

Fruitcake also features contributions from Rivermaya's Rico Blanco, rapper Francis M., his wife Pia Arroyo and her sister Myla (as Evil Stepsisters), singer/actress Agot Isidro, Jeng Tan of Keltscross, Richard Gonzaga of local jazz band Parliament, Robert Javier of The Youth, and Medwin Marfil of True Faith (who was not credited in the album sleeve).[2]

Release

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The release of Fruitcake was preceded by a promotional EP of the same name, featuring an edited version of the title track.[8] Its music video was released in December, directed by the band and featuring cameos from Francis M. and Agot Isidro.[3] A music video for "Trip to Jerusalem" was released the following year, also featuring a cameo from Isidro.[9] MTV Asia also released a live performance of the band performing songs from the album in June 1997.[10]

A companion storybook was released in March 1997, illustrated by Cynthia Bauzon and published by Anvil.[11] It was reissued in 2008.

In 2009, BMG reissued Eraserheads's back catalogue, including Fruitcake. After the band's reunion concert in 2022, it was re-released on streaming services to include 360-degree spatial sound.[12]

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[13]

Fruitcake reached triple platinum a month after its release, with 120,000 copies sold.[11]

The album received mixed reviews. “The concept is fine, and the music is surprisingly accomplished, but they’re skating dangerously near preciousness,” said Barbara Marchadesch in her review for Manila Standard.[3] In his retrospective review for Allmusic, David Gonzales stated: "While the band deserves some credit for trying to stretch boundaries, Fruitcake is the wrong album at the wrong time."[6]

Critics unfavorably viewed its diverse influences as distracting and “smack[ing] of parody”.[4] They also lamented the lack of Filipino tracks.[5][14] "Perhaps wanting to be 'at par' with their foreign counterparts, the Eraserheads have ceased to be the mouthpiece of the Filipino youth," one review stated.[4]

Hindi naman kami concerned sa sales, eh (We're not concerned by the sales),” Zabala commented in 1996. “Basta kuntento kami sa kinalabasan ng album (What matters is that we are content with how the album turned out).”[2] Vocalist Ely Buendia retrospectively commented on the album in a 2017 Esquire interview: "I stand by Fruitcake. As a whole, as a concept. But I won’t listen to it in its entirety...A lot of people noticed [the Beatles influences] and that’s one of the things I regret, not being able to see the bigger picture."[1]

Track listing

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No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Fruitcake"Ely Buendia4:59
2."Shadow"Buendia2:38
3."Flat Tire"4:09
4."Shadow Boxes Accountants"Buddy Zabala1:02
5."Gatekeeper"Marasigan2:43
6."Old Fashioned Christmas Carol"Buendia4:39
7."Styrosnow"Buendia2:15
8."Trip to Jerusalem"Buendia6:15
9."Shadow Reads the News Today, Oh Boy"Zabala0:27
10."Fruit Fairy"
  • Earnest Mangulabnan
  • Marasigan
  • Zabala
2:49
11."The Fabulous Baker Boy"Zabala5:00
12."Lord of the Rhum"Marcus Adoro4:02
13."Lightyears"Buendia4:18
14."Christmas Ball"
  • Marasigan
  • Tan
3:19
15."Monovirus"Marasigan4:28
16."shadow@buttholesurfs.com"Zabala1:04
17."Rise and Shine"Buendia3:32
18."Santa Ain't Comin' No Mo'"Buendia2:53
19."Christmas Party"Buendia4:04
20."Hitchin' a Ride"
  • Marasigan
  • Tan
3:38
21."Christmas Morning"Buendia4:07
22."Merry Christmas Everybody Happy New Year Too"Buendia0:57
Total length:73:18
  • "Fruitcake" starts with the album's final track, "Merry Christmas Everybody Happy New Year Too", in reverse.
  • "Old Fashioned Christmas Carol" includes lyrics from "Silver Bells", "Jingle Bells", "The Little Drummer Boy", "Joy to the World", "Silent Night", "Whispering Hope" and "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer".
  • "Lightyears" has the lyrics "north of nowhere" and "south of somewhere" which are names substituted to the conventional side A and B in cassette versions of the album. The string section of this track was recorded at Cinema Audio.
  • "Hitchin' a Ride" contains a sample of "Fruitcake" near the end.

Personnel

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Adapted from the liner notes.[15]

References

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  1. ^ a b Romulo, Erwin. "Ely Buendia on Existence, Loneliness, and the Songs That Matter". Esquire Philippines. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Babes, Sally. "Eraserheads: The Carol Kings! (Radiohead, December 1996)". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Marchadesch, Barbara. "The Funny Lady meets the 'Fruits' (The Manila Standard, December 13, 1996)". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Fruit(cake) of the Loop (The Manila Times, December 15, 1996)". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  5. ^ a b Gil, Baby A. "A piece of the Heads' Fruitcake (The Philippine Star, January 24, 1997)". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  6. ^ a b Gonzales, David. "Eraserheads - Fruitcake review". Allmusic. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  7. ^ Ng, Scott. "SB19 and NOBITA release Eraserheads covers to celebrate band's reunion concert". NME. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  8. ^ "Fruitcake (The Manila Times, November 15, 1996)". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  9. ^ "Eraserheads - Videography". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  10. ^ "Eraserheads performance premieres on MTV Asia". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  11. ^ a b "The 'Fruit Cake' story (The Manila Bulletin, January 22, 1997)". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  12. ^ Basbas, Franchesca Judine. "5 Eraserheads albums to be re-released to include 360-degree spatial sound". Bandwagon Asia. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
  13. ^ Fruitcake at AllMusic
  14. ^ "No Pinoy tunes in E-Heads' Yule LP (Malaya, December 22, 1996)". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  15. ^ Fruitcake (album liner notes). Eraserheads. BMG. 1996.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
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