Catholic Boy

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Catholic Boy
Catholic Boy (The Jim Carroll Band album - cover art).jpg
Studio album by The Jim Carroll Band
Released January 3, 1980
Recorded June - August 1979
Genre New wave, punk rock
Length 38:26
Label Atco
Producer Earl McGrath and Bob Clearmountain
The Jim Carroll Band chronology
Catholic Boy
(1980)
Dry Dreams
(1982)Dry Dreams1982
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars [1]
Creem (not rated) [2]
Robert Christgau B+ [3]
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars [4]

Catholic Boy (1980) is the debut album by The Jim Carroll Band, led by Jim Carroll, who was notable for publishing the 1978 memoir The Basketball Diaries,, and poetry collections including Living at the Movies. It spawned two FM hits, "It's Too Late" and "People Who Died" (about friends of the singer who died before their time). The front cover photograph was taken by Annie Leibovitz.

Track listing

  1. "Wicked Gravity" (Jim Carroll) – 4:56
  2. "Three Sisters" (Carroll, Terrell Winn) – 3:19
  3. "Day and Night" (Carroll, Allen Lanier) – 2:22
  4. "Nothing Is True" (Carroll, Brian Linsley) – 3:29
  5. "People Who Died" (Carroll, Brian Linsley, Stephen Linsley, Terrell Winn, Wayne Woods) – 4:59
  6. "City Drops into the Night" (Carroll, Stephen Linsley, Brian Linsley) – 7:23
  7. "Crow" (Carroll, Terrell Winn) – 3:02
  8. "It's Too Late" (Carroll, Wayne Woods) – 3:04
  9. "I Want the Angel" (Carroll, Brian Linsley) – 2:49
  10. "Catholic Boy" (Carroll) – 3:03

Personnel

Additional personnel

Charts

Album

Chart (1981) Peak
position
Billboard Hot 100 73

Cover versions

"People Who Died" has been covered multiple times: John Cale on the album Antártida (1995), Drive-By Truckers on the live album Alabama Ass Whuppin' (2000), Lordz of Brooklyn on the album The Brooklyn Way (2006), and Willie Nile on the album American Ride (2013). In 2014, Gwar Appended a version of "People Who Died" onto their cover of the Pet Shop Boys song West End Girls for the AV Club's Undercover series, with lyrics paying tribute to their recently deceased singer, Oderus Urungus (aka Dave Brockie).

References