Dr. Feelgood (stylized as D℞. FEELGOOD) is the fifth studio album by American heavy metal band Mötley Crüe, released on August 28, 1989. Dr. Feelgood topped the Billboard 200 chart, making it the band's only album to claim this position. It was the first album Mötley Crüe recorded after their quest for sobriety and rehabilitation in 1989.[6] In addition to being Mötley Crüe's best selling album, it is highly regarded by music critics and fans as the band's best studio album. This was also the band's last album to be recorded with lead singer Vince Neil until the 1997 album Generation Swine.
Recording
Producer Bob Rock found working with Mötley Crüe difficult, describing them as "four L.A. bad asses who used to drink a bottle of wine and want to kill each other."[7] To minimize conflict and allow production to proceed smoothly, Rock had each member record their parts separately.[7]
The intro track "T.n.T. (Terror 'n Tinseltown)" features a sample of a woman saying "Dr Davis, telephone please". This was the same sample used by the band Queensrÿche for their song "Eyes of a Stranger" which was off of their album Operation: Mindcrime released one year prior to Dr. Feelgood.[citation needed]
Steven Tyler of Aerosmith sings backing vocals on "Sticky Sweet". "Nikki and Tommy and I hung out a lot," said Tyler, who was in Vancouver around the same time, recording Pump. "Of course, we're all akin by our old drinking and drugging days."[8]
Release
Dr. Feelgood has sold more than six million copies in the U.S.,[9] and went Gold in the U.K.[10] In various interviews, members of Mötley Crüe stated that it was their most solid album from a musical standpoint, due in no small part to their collective push for sobriety.[citation needed]
Reviews for Dr. Feelgood have been highly positive. Critics remarked the renewed energy and entertaining values that permeate the album,[11][20][12][15][14][17][18][19] bringing the listeners "in a world of everlasting party",[16] where they "savored the joys of trashy, unapologetically decadent fun".[11] Bob Rock's meticulous production was universally praised,[11][20][14][18][19] in particular for affording "the band the ability to write stronger melodic hooks without losing the hard rock sound they so coveted"[19] and for the power of the guitar riffs.[15][18]
Canadian journalist Martin Popoff wrote that Dr. Feelgood is an album "made by a dumb band trying really hard"[14] while a BBC Music reviewer declared it "a glitzy flashy experience... ultimately shallow and narcissistic".[20] Other critics stated that Mötley Crüe are not "out to win humanitarian awards or impress us with lyrical muscle",[12] but to rock "...hard"![15]Dr. Feelgood, wrote Mick Wall in a review of 2009's reissue, "was the first time Mötley Crüe actually became well-known for music. Until then, their unthinking mash-up of glam and metal had made them a hoot onstage but a disappointment on record... Though pushed close by last year's shock return with the weighty Saints of Los Angeles, [the album is] the best Mötley Crüe have ever released."[13]
"Dr. Feelgood" and "Kickstart My Heart" were nominated for Grammy awards for Best Hard Rock Performance in 1990 and 1991, but lost both years to Living Colour.[21] Mötley Crüe won the best Hard rock/Heavy metal album of the year at the American Music Awards in January 1991 for Dr. Feelgood.[22]
Legacy
Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich recruited Bob Rock to produce their self-titled 1991 album after being impressed with Rock's production work on Dr. Feelgood.[23] Rock would later produce Metallica's subsequent albums, until St. Anger, where he also played that album's bass parts.
As of October 14, 2008, the album, minus the opening track "T.N.T. (Terror 'N Tinseltown)" because of length and playability, has become downloadable content for the Rock Band video game series. The tracks "Dr. Feelgood" and "Kickstart My Heart" were also released as downloadable content for the video game Rocksmith 2014 in 2015.
"Dr. Feelgood" and "Kickstart My Heart" are available in the soundtrack of 2009 video game, Brütal Legend.
To mark the twentieth anniversary of the album, Mötley Crüe performed the album in its entirety at Crüe Fest 2.[24]
"All in the Name of Rock" (Live Around the World 89-90)
Sixx, Neil
4:54
9.
"Dr. Feelgood" (Live Around the World 89-90)
Mars, Sixx
6:41
Note
The original Korean LP edition does not contain the first two tracks, "T.n.T. (Terror 'n Tinseltown)" and "Dr. Feelgood".
Dr. Feelgood: The Videos
Dr. Feelgood: The Videos is a video album released in 1990 and features all the music videos from the album, concert footage, interviews and recording session footage.
Videos include
"Dr. Feelgood"
"Kickstart My Heart"
"Without You"
"Don't Go Away Mad (Just Go Away)"
"Same Ol' Situation (S.O.S.)"
Personnel
Mötley Crüe
Vince Neil – lead and backing vocals, rhythm guitar, harmonica, shakers
^Pennanen, Timo (2006). Sisältää hitin – levyt ja esittäjät Suomen musiikkilistoilla vuodesta 1972 (in Finnish) (1st ed.). Helsinki: Kustannusosakeyhtiö Otava. p. 166. ISBN978-951-1-21053-5.