I Don't Want to Save the World

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I Don't Want to Save the World
Studio album by
Cock Robin
Released2006
RecordedRevolver Studios, Thousand Oaks, California
East Iris Studios, Nashville, Tennessee
Wire, Austin, Texas
Studio Mega, Paris, France
GenrePop rock
Length54:01
Label31 Production Edition
ProducerTheron Carroll for Mikal Blue Productions
Cock Robin chronology
First Love / Last Rites
(1989)
I Don't Want to Save the World
(2006)
Songs From A Bell Tower
(2010)

I Don't Want to Save the World is the fourth album by Cock Robin and was released in 2006. It sees the reformation of the band after a 16-year hiatus. It features a selection of their trademark harmonic pop. The lyrics seem to be greatly influenced by personal relations and experiences spent since the last time the duo of Kingsbery and LaCazio shared a pop group.[1] An example of this is "Italian Soul", which may be a take upon the consequences of meeting and working together after a long time apart (Anna LaCazio is of mixed Italian-Chinese descent). Apart from a few TV appearances in 2006, mainly in France, the album was not widely promoted.

Track listing[edit]

  1. "Superhuman" – 4:32
  2. "I Don't Want to Save the World" – 4:01
  3. "Fair Enough" – 4:11
  4. "Across the Freeway" – 4:28
  5. "Touched" – 3:27
  6. "Body Over Mind" – 3:48
  7. "Bo" – 3:21
  8. "Through the Years" – 4:59
  9. "Italian Soul" – 4:22
  10. "The Valley Below" – 4:29
  11. "Dominoes" – 3:52
  12. "Me and My Shaman" – 4:22
  13. "Under the Star Which I Was Born" – 3:33

All songs by Peter Kingsbery except Italian Soul (LaCazio/Kingsbery/Wright), The Valley Below (Wright/Kingsbery) and Under The Star Which I Was Born (Polnareff/Kingsbery). This last song is a cover version of French singer-songwriter Michel Polnareff's song "Sous quelle étoile suis-je né ?"

Musicians[edit]

Cock Robin[edit]

Additional musicians[edit]

  • Victor Indrizzio: drums
  • Pat Mastelotto: drums on The Valley Below and Me And My Shaman
  • John Pierce: bass
  • Mikal Blue: additional electric guitar
  • James McCorkel: additional electric guitar

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Once in a Million". Nyahl.net. Retrieved 2012-02-23.