Mr. Scruff is the eponymous debut studio album by Mr. Scruff. It was released via Pleasure Music on May 12, 1997.

Mr. Scruff
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 12, 1997 (Pleasure Music)
May 22, 2005 (Mrs. Cruff remaster)
Recorded1995-1997
GenreElectronic, breakbeat, trip hop, nu jazz
Length61:28
LabelPleasure Music (1997)
Ninja Tune (2005)
Mr. Scruff chronology
Mr. Scruff
(1997)
Keep It Unreal
(1999)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The album saw the emergence of one of Scruff's obsessions – sea-life. The opening track, "Sea Mammal", was the first of several to use cut-up recordings of voice-overs from children's stories and nature documentaries to create surreal and silly stories.[2] The track is a tribute to Boogie Down Productions' track "My Philosophy", and was originally released as the B-side to Scruff's debut release, the single "Hocus Pocus" (1995).[3] The album also contains another track that references sea creatures – the album's closer, "Wail" (being a homophone for "whale").[2]

The album is currently out of print, but in 2005 it was remastered and re-released via Ninja Tune under the name Mrs. Cruff, containing three additional tracks.

Track listing edit

All music is composed by Andrew Carthy

Original release
No.TitleLength
1."Sea Mammal"8:20
2."Bass Baby"5:57
3."Limbic Funk"5:29
4."Chicken in a Box"8:26
5."Jazz Potato"6:07
6."Bonce"4:59
7."Night Time"6:00
8."After Time"2:32
9."Crisps"6:27

All music is composed by Andrew Carthy

Mrs. Cruff re-release
No.TitleLength
1."Sea Mammal"8:20
2."Tubby Mechanical Friend"6:01
3."Bass Baby"5:57
4."Bonce"4:59
5."Chicken in a Box"8:26
6."Night Time"6:00
7."After Time"2:32
8."Limbic Funk"5:29
9."Bobby's Jazz Pony"5:03
10."Jazz Potato"6:07
11."Crisps"6:27
12."Wail"3:46

Trivia edit

The song "Limbic Funk" samples audio from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

References edit

  1. ^ Benjamin Heath. "Mr. Scruff - Mr. Scruff". Allmusic. Retrieved 30 January 2012.
  2. ^ a b "BBC.co.uk Collective". Editors Review: Mr. Scruff – Trouser Jazz. Retrieved 18 February 2008.
  3. ^ "eMusic Europe". Mr. Scruff (Biography). Retrieved 17 December 2008.