Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Crash Test Dummies|Give Yourself A Hand

Give Yourself A Hand

Crash Test Dummies

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

By 1999, Crash Test Dummies probably figured they would never be hip in America, so they made partial concessions on Give Yourself a Hand. If you have trouble getting past Brad Roberts' awkward singing and writing, then maybe innovative breakbeats and arrangements might obscure them. The results are exactly what you'd expect -- an instrumentally progressive pop album, completely neutralized by embarrassing lyrics and vocals. Give Yourself a Hand redefines the Dummies sound with lightly applied techno strokes, not far off from Everything But the Girl's classic Walking Wounded. Some textures here are stunning, with electric piano flourishes and hip-hop drumbeat samples that sound tunefully great. The Dummies exhibit an unexpected knack for drum'n'bass shadings in "Pissed with Me" and "A Little Something." Unfortunately, the beauty of the surroundings can't compensate for Roberts' singularly strange lyrical "talents." The Dummies make the amateur mistake of confusing smugness for detached insight -- one of their traditional problems -- and inject strange scatological and guttural references to promote their indifference. This approach fails: the words become odd, desperate attempts to sound distant and invulnerable ("Stop frickin' with me," "I love your goo"?) that end up laughable. There's also the problem of Roberts' voice, the thrice-deep baritone which, depending on your taste, is either brazenly different or horribly cloying. On Give Yourself a Hand, it's more the latter, an intrusion by someone attempting soulfulness through bad vocal inflections. On songs already saddled with deliberate unintelligence, like the opening, "Keep a Lid on Things," that's a recipe for disaster. The songs sung by Ellen Reid fare much better, especially the beautiful "A Little Something," which at least gives voice to vulnerability. The potential in that song is great enough to make you wonder what might have happened had the Crash Test Dummies been less concerned about not looking like chumps.

© Paul Pearson /TiVo

More info

Give Yourself A Hand

Crash Test Dummies

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From £10.83/month

1
Keep A Lid On Things
00:02:45

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Greg Wells, Composer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P) 1998 BMG Music Canada

2
A Cigarette Is All You Get
00:02:27

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

3
Just Chillin'
00:03:32

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

4
I Want To Par-tay!
00:02:29

Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

5
Give Yourself A Hand
00:02:59

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

6
Get You In The Morning
00:02:57

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

7
Pissed With Me
00:03:08

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

8
Just Shoot Me, Baby
00:03:35

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

9
A Little Something
00:04:35

Greg Wells, Composer - Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Greg Wells, Lyricist - Ellen Reid, Composer - Ellen Reid, Lyricist - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

10
I Love Your Goo
00:03:31

Greg Wells, Producer - Greg Wells, Recording Engineer - Greg Wells, Mixing Engineer - Brad Roberts, Composer - Brad Roberts, Lyricist - Crash Test Dummies, Performer - Brian Scheuble, Recording Engineer - Brian Scheuble, Mixing Engineer

(P)1998 BMG Music Canada

11
Aching to Sneeze
00:03:23

Brad Roberts, Composer - Crash Test Dummies, Performer

(P) 1998 BMG Music Canada

12
Playing Dead
00:03:16

Brad Roberts, Composer - Crash Test Dummies, Performer

(P) 1998 BMG Music Canada

Album review

By 1999, Crash Test Dummies probably figured they would never be hip in America, so they made partial concessions on Give Yourself a Hand. If you have trouble getting past Brad Roberts' awkward singing and writing, then maybe innovative breakbeats and arrangements might obscure them. The results are exactly what you'd expect -- an instrumentally progressive pop album, completely neutralized by embarrassing lyrics and vocals. Give Yourself a Hand redefines the Dummies sound with lightly applied techno strokes, not far off from Everything But the Girl's classic Walking Wounded. Some textures here are stunning, with electric piano flourishes and hip-hop drumbeat samples that sound tunefully great. The Dummies exhibit an unexpected knack for drum'n'bass shadings in "Pissed with Me" and "A Little Something." Unfortunately, the beauty of the surroundings can't compensate for Roberts' singularly strange lyrical "talents." The Dummies make the amateur mistake of confusing smugness for detached insight -- one of their traditional problems -- and inject strange scatological and guttural references to promote their indifference. This approach fails: the words become odd, desperate attempts to sound distant and invulnerable ("Stop frickin' with me," "I love your goo"?) that end up laughable. There's also the problem of Roberts' voice, the thrice-deep baritone which, depending on your taste, is either brazenly different or horribly cloying. On Give Yourself a Hand, it's more the latter, an intrusion by someone attempting soulfulness through bad vocal inflections. On songs already saddled with deliberate unintelligence, like the opening, "Keep a Lid on Things," that's a recipe for disaster. The songs sung by Ellen Reid fare much better, especially the beautiful "A Little Something," which at least gives voice to vulnerability. The potential in that song is great enough to make you wonder what might have happened had the Crash Test Dummies been less concerned about not looking like chumps.

© Paul Pearson /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Moanin'

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Moanin' Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Takin' Off

Herbie Hancock

Takin' Off Herbie Hancock

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane
More on Qobuz
By Crash Test Dummies

God Shuffled His Feet

Crash Test Dummies

God Shuffled His Feet Crash Test Dummies

The Best Of Crash Test Dummies

Crash Test Dummies

The Best Of Crash Test Dummies Crash Test Dummies

The Ghosts That Haunt Me

Crash Test Dummies

The Ghosts That Haunt Me Crash Test Dummies

Jingle All the Way

Crash Test Dummies

Jingle All the Way Crash Test Dummies

God Shuffled His Feet

Crash Test Dummies

God Shuffled His Feet Crash Test Dummies

Playlists

You may also like...

Oh Mercy

Bob Dylan

Oh Mercy Bob Dylan

Mirror To The Sky

Yes

The Steven Wilson Remixes

Yes

Greatest Hits

Journey

Toto IV

Toto

Toto IV Toto