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Gutterflower

Gutterflower
Ggdgutter.png
Studio album by Goo Goo Dolls
Released April 9, 2002
Recorded August–December 2001 at Icon Recording Studios and Capitol Studios, Hollywood, CA, and House of Blues Studios, Encino, CA
Genre Alternative rock
Length 41:46
Label Warner Bros.
Producer
Goo Goo Dolls chronology
What I Learned About Ego, Opinion, Art & Commerce
(2001)
Gutterflower
(2002)
Live in Buffalo: July 4th 2004
(2004)
Singles from Gutterflower
  1. "Here Is Gone"
    Released: March 5, 2002
  2. "Big Machine"
    Released: September 17, 2002
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 72/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AbsolutePunk (91%)
Allmusic 4/5 stars
The A.V. Club (average)
Blender 3/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly C+
PopMatters 9/10 stars
Q 3/5 stars
Rock Hard (de) (8/10)
Rolling Stone 3.5/5 stars
Slant 2.5/5 stars

Gutterflower is the seventh studio album by the alternative rock band Goo Goo Dolls. It was released in 2002 on Warner Bros. Records. It is the follow up to their critically successful albums Dizzy Up the Girl and A Boy Named Goo. The album was commercially successful upon its release, hitting #4 on the Billboard 200.

All tracks written by Johnny Rzeznik, except where noted.

"Here Is Gone" and "Big Machine" have been the only two songs released from this album as singles and videos have been created for both. A video for the promotional single "Sympathy" was also released.

John Rzeznik refers to this as his "disco song". "I’m really horrible at programming drum machines, but this was like pattern 74 on my drum machine, which said 'disco.' I called all my friends and said, 'Check this out, this is my disco song!'" He describes it as "a propulsive tale of unrequited love". "Big Machine" was occasionally performed live on a smashed guitar that Rzeznik has fondly nicknamed "The Half-Caster". Despite being smashed in half, it still plays. It can be seen in a 2002 VH1 Storytellers special. Rzeznik stated that he had someone fix it up and it works just fine.

John Rzeznik wrote this song on the phone while talking to a friend. He asked his friend if he should "take the chords up or take 'em down?" and the friend told him to "take 'em up" and that's how he came up with the chorus and the rest of the song came together shortly thereafter.

According to Rzeznik in 2007, the video for this song cost more to produce than the entire Gutterflower album itself.


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