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John Henry (album)
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| John Henry | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | September 13, 1994 | |||
| Recorded | November 1993–June 1994 | |||
| Studio |
| |||
| Genre | Alternative rock, indie rock | |||
| Length | 57:07 | |||
| Label | Elektra | |||
| Producer | Paul Fox, They Might Be Giants | |||
| They Might Be Giants chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Singles from John Henry | ||||
| ||||
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Chicago Tribune | |
| Entertainment Weekly | B[3] |
| NME | 7/10[4] |
| The Rolling Stone Album Guide | |
| The Village Voice | |
John Henry is the fifth studio album by American alternative rock group They Might Be Giants. It was released in 1994. It is the first album by They Might Be Giants to include a full band arrangement, rather than synthesized and programmed backing tracks. The album's name, a reference to the man versus machine fable of John Henry, is an allusion to the band's fundamental switch to more conventional instrumentation, especially the newly established use of a human drummer instead of a drum machine.[7]
John Henry is TMBG's longest record and was the band's highest-charting adult album, having peaked at #61 on the Billboard 200, until 2011's Join Us, which peaked at #32.[8] In 2013, the album was reissued across a double LP by Asbestos Records.[9]
Lyrical themes
[edit]The lyrics to the song "AKA Driver" refer to a "NyQuil driver". John Flansburgh offered an explanation of the legal issue with the inclusion of a brand name:[10]
It was a brief education for us in the difference between protected speech and trademark infringement. Although it was a possibility that we could have gotten away with it, or settled with the NyQuil manufacturers for a small amount of money, the path of least hassle was simply omitting the name from the package. According to our lawyer you can say pretty much anything in a song about a product, and that expression is a protected part of every American's freedom of speech. However when you title a song after a trademarked product and then start selling your recording (which is also a product) you run the risk of the trademark holder suing you for infringing on their trademark. To make matters tougher on ol' NyQuil Driver, trademark holders are compelled by the law to protect their trademark or they run the risk of their product name falling into the public domain.
"I Should Be Allowed to Think" excerpts the first line ("I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving, hysterical") of the poem Howl by Allen Ginsberg. The song is also, according to its author, John Linnell, an example of the use of an "unreliable narrator".[11] "Meet James Ensor" refers to an eccentric Belgian expressionist painter whose works excited John Flansburgh. In an interview, Flansburgh explained that "the line 'Dig him up and shake his hand' is actually very specific – a parallel idea to a lot of his paintings which involve resurrections, skeletons and puppets being animated. [...] With the song, I'm trying to encapsulate the issues of his life – an eccentric guy who became celebrated and was soon left behind as his ideas were taken into the culture and other people became expressionists."[12] "Why Must I Be Sad?" is a string of references to Alice Cooper song titles and lyrics, involving several titles from the Billion Dollar Babies album including "No More Mr. Nice Guy," "I Love the Dead," and others.
Appearances in other media
[edit]Instrumental excerpts from "No One Knows My Plan" and "The End of The Tour" were used as the opening and closing themes, respectively, during the first season of the animated variety show Cartoon Planet in 1995. "No One Knows My Plan" was also used in a 30-second PBS Kids web promo in 2005.[13]
Track listing
[edit]All tracks are written by They Might Be Giants, except where noted.
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Subliminal" | 2:45 |
| 2. | "Snail Shell" | 3:20 |
| 3. | "Sleeping In the Flowers" | 4:30 |
| 4. | "Unrelated Thing" | 2:30 |
| 5. | "AKA Driver" (They Might Be Giants, Tony Maimone, Brian Doherty) | 3:14 |
| 6. | "I Should Be Allowed to Think" (They Might Be Giants, Tony Maimone) | 3:09 |
| 7. | "Extra Savoir-Faire" | 2:48 |
| 8. | "Why Must I Be Sad?" | 4:08 |
| 9. | "Spy" | 3:06 |
| 10. | "O, Do Not Forsake Me" | 2:30 |
| 11. | "No One Knows My Plan" | 2:37 |
| 12. | "Dirt Bike" | 3:05 |
| 13. | "Destination Moon" | 2:27 |
| 14. | "A Self Called Nowhere" | 3:22 |
| 15. | "Meet James Ensor" | 1:33 |
| 16. | "Thermostat" | 3:11 |
| 17. | "Window" | 1:00 |
| 18. | "Out of Jail" | 2:38 |
| 19. | "Stomp Box" | 1:55 |
| 20. | "The End of the Tour" | 3:18 |
| Total length: | 57:07 | |
Personnel
[edit]John Henry is the first album credited to They Might Be Giants as a full band, rather than a duo:
- John Flansburgh – vocals, guitars
- John Linnell – vocals, keyboards, accordion, saxophones
- Brian Doherty – drums, percussion
- Tony Maimone – bass guitar, ukulele
- Graham Maby – bass guitar on tracks 11 & 14
Additional musicians
- Robert Quine – guitar solos on tracks 3 & 11
- Hudson Shad – vocals on track 10
- Steven Bernstein – trumpet
Charts
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Anderson, Rick. "John Henry – They Might Be Giants". AllMusic. Retrieved September 4, 2016.
- ^ Caro, Mark (September 29, 1994). "They Might Be Giants: John Henry (Elektra)". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 4, 2016.
- ^ Mirkin, Steven (September 16, 1994). "John Henry". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on February 4, 2017. Retrieved September 4, 2016.
- ^ "They Might Be Giants: John Henry". NME. September 17, 1994. p. 50.
- ^ Considine, J. D. (2004). "They Might Be Giants". In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. pp. 808–09. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8.
- ^ Christgau, Robert (March 11, 1997). "Consumer Guide". The Village Voice. Retrieved September 4, 2016.
- ^ "tmbg.com information on John Henry". Archived from the original on June 6, 1997. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). Retrieved 2012-08-10. - ^ Billboard.com TMBG chart history. Retrieved 2012-08-10.
- ^ "They Might Be Giants - John Henry 2xLP". Asbestos Records. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
- ^ tmbg.com John Henry track information.
- ^ Gigantic (A Tale of Two Johns), 2003. Dir. AJ Schnack.
- ^ Consumable Online interview with John Flansburgh.
- ^ "PBS Kids BIG BIG Friend Day Web Promo". YouTube. April 25, 2019. Retrieved June 11, 2024.
- ^ "They Might Be Giants ARIA Chart history (albums) 1988 to 2024". ARIA. Retrieved July 28, 2024 – via Imgur.com. N.B. The High Point number in the NAT column represents the release's peak on the national chart.
External links
[edit]- John Henry at This Might Be a Wiki
- John Henry HyperCard Stack Emulator - A web-based recreation of the band's HyperCard promotional tool
John Henry (album)
View on GrokipediaBackground
Conception and title origin
The album John Henry was conceived by They Might Be Giants as a significant departure from the synthesizer- and drum machine-heavy production that characterized their earlier work, such as Flood (1990) and Apollo 18 (1992), with the goal of creating a more organic, rock-oriented sound featuring live instrumentation. This shift represented the duo's desire to evolve beyond their lo-fi, tape-loop roots toward a fuller band dynamic.[5] The idea was prompted by Elektra Records executive Susan Drew, who had signed the band and encouraged them to abandon reel-to-reel tape recordings and synthesized elements in favor of a more traditional rock approach following the relative commercial success of their prior Elektra releases. Drew, who joined Elektra's A&R team in 1988 and had tracked the band's independent career, played a key role in steering their artistic direction during this period.[6] The album's title draws from the American folk hero John Henry, a legendary Black steel driver in the late 19th century who, according to ballads and work songs, raced against a steam-powered drill during the construction of a railroad tunnel, outperforming the machine but collapsing from exhaustion shortly after his victory. This narrative symbolized the band's own "human vs. machine" transition, pitting live musicians against the automated drum machines of their past.[7] Development of John Henry began in late 1993, after the release of Apollo 18 and before the band's interim Back to Skull EP in 1994, marking a pivotal moment in their career as they prepared for their first full-band recording sessions.Transition to live band
Prior to the recording of John Henry, They Might Be Giants—principled by John Flansburgh and John Linnell—had primarily operated as a duo, relying on drum machines such as the Alesis HR-16 and extensive multi-tracking techniques to construct their dense, eclectic sound across albums like Flood (1990). This approach, while innovative, limited their live performances to mimed renditions or minimal setups, prompting a strategic evolution to enhance touring capabilities following Flood's commercial breakthrough, which sold over 250,000 copies and elevated expectations for the band's viability on larger stages.[8][2] John Henry marked the band's first full-length album featuring a consistent live backing ensemble, solidifying a rock-oriented identity that abandoned synthetic percussion in favor of organic instrumentation. Key additions included bassist Tony Maimone, formerly of Pere Ubu, who provided a steady rhythmic foundation; Kurt Hoffman of The Ordinaires on keyboards, reeds, and horns, adding textural depth with woodwinds and brass; and drummer Jonathan Feinberg, who initially joined for the post-Apollo 18 (1992) tour phase but was replaced by Brian Doherty for the majority of the album's tracking. Graham Maby, veteran bassist from Joe Jackson's band, contributed to two tracks: "No One Knows My Plan" and "A Self Called Nowhere," further enriching the lineup's professional polish.[2][9][10][1] This personnel shift was partly driven by pressure from their label, Elektra Records, which sought a more conventional, hit-oriented production under producer Paul Fox—aiming for broader market appeal after Flood's success—and a deliberate push to make the band more adaptable for extensive live touring. Flansburgh later reflected that the transition involved "sharing equipment" in a collaborative band environment, contrasting their earlier isolated studio methods and enabling a fuller, more dynamic sonic palette that defined John Henry as a pivotal turning point in the group's career.[8][9]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for John Henry took place from mid-1993 to early 1994, encompassing pre-production demos, principal tracking, and additional overdubs. The process began with full-band demos for nearly all tracks on the album, excluding "Stomp Box," recorded earlier with engineer Pat Dillett at Excello Studios in Brooklyn, New York. These demo sessions, held primarily at Excello Studios in Brooklyn, New York (with some work at Skyline Studios), involved the evolving live band lineup and took place over a few long days in July and December 1993, capturing initial arrangements in a raw, group performance format.[11][12] The demos were later officially released as John Henry Demos, first as a bonus for the 2012 Instant Fan Club edition and then in a remixed and mastered version on CD and vinyl in 2018 by Idlewild Recordings.[11] Principal recording occurred at Bearsville Studios in Woodstock, New York, over a five-week period from December 1993 to January 1994, where the band focused on fleshing out the material with their full touring ensemble.[11] Additional work, including overdubs and refinements, was completed at Skyline Studios in New York City later in the process.[1]Production team and techniques
The album John Henry was co-produced by Paul Fox and They Might Be Giants, with Ed Thacker serving as the primary engineer and mixer.[13] Mixing was handled by Ed Thacker at CanAm Recorders in Tarzana, California.[1] Paul Fox, whose prior credits included production on XTC's 1989 album Oranges & Lemons, guided the sessions toward a more organic and band-oriented approach, emphasizing live performances in the studio to capture a fuller sound.[14] Thacker's engineering contributed to the polished yet raw execution, drawing on his experience with diverse rock acts.[13] A key shift in production techniques was the move to live tracking with a complete backing band, moving away from the synthesized and drum machine-driven elements of prior releases.[2] Drummer Brian Doherty provided organic percussion throughout, replacing programmed beats with dynamic, acoustic drum sounds that added warmth and immediacy.[2] The sessions, held primarily at Bearsville Studios in upstate New York, incorporated heavy layering of guitars for textural depth and live horn sections arranged by Kurt Hoffman, enhancing tracks with brass accents on several songs.[13] This analog-focused process, informed by extensive band rehearsals, created a "woodshedded" feel—intensive and collaborative, evoking the raw energy of live rock recording.[15] The resulting album spans 57:07 across 20 tracks, prioritizing dense, multifaceted arrangements that contrasted the band's earlier minimalist aesthetic with richer, more varied instrumentation.[16] This production philosophy not only amplified the group's evolving live performance capabilities but also yielded a warmer, more cohesive sonic palette overall.[2]Music and lyrics
Musical style and instrumentation
John Henry marked a significant evolution in They Might Be Giants' sound, embracing alternative rock and indie rock as primary genres while incorporating elements of folk, jazz, and pop. This album represented the band's first departure from their signature use of drum machines and synthesized elements, opting instead for live drums performed by Brian Doherty throughout, which lent a more organic and dynamic feel to the tracks.[1][17][2] The instrumentation expanded to a full band setup, featuring prominent guitars handled by John Flansburgh on rhythm and lead, bass lines from Tony Maimone (and occasionally Graham Maby on tracks 11 and 14), keyboards and reeds by John Linnell and Kurt Hoffman, and live horns including saxophone and trumpet on select songs such as "Snail Shell" and "Sleeping in the Flowers." This configuration, including the addition of drums, bass, sax, and trumpet, allowed for richer, more layered textures compared to the duo's earlier lo-fi approaches.[18][2][19] Overall, the album's sound is guitar-heavy and organic, characterized by dense arrangements that blend upbeat rockers like "Snail Shell" with slower ballads such as "Why Must I Be Sad?," spanning nearly 57 minutes across 20 tracks to make it the band's longest at the time of release. Unlike predecessors such as Flood, which relied on pop-oriented synths and programmed beats, John Henry emphasized full-band dynamics tailored for live performance compatibility, resulting in a harder-edged, more conventional rock production.[17][19][1]Lyrical themes
The lyrics on John Henry frequently employ unreliable narrators, absurdity, and cultural references, continuing the band's tradition of witty, off-kilter storytelling while delving into more personal and surreal territory.[20] For instance, "I Should Be Allowed to Think" opens with a direct parody of Allen Ginsberg's 1956 poem "Howl," twisting its visionary intensity into a rant of paranoid delusions about surveillance and suppressed thoughts.[21] Similarly, "No One Knows My Plan" features an unreliable protagonist whose secretive ambitions unravel into chaos and self-doubt, blending conspiratorial fantasy with humorous resignation.[20] Specific tracks highlight eclectic cultural nods and biographical elements. "Meet James Ensor" serves as a concise, informative biography of the Belgian painter James Ensor, celebrating his macabre, mask-filled works in a style akin to the band's earlier educational songs like "Mammal."[15] "Why Must I Be Sad?" draws on Alice Cooper's catalog, incorporating titles such as "No More Mr. Nice Guy," "I Love the Dead," and "Only Women Bleed" to frame a young person's existential malaise through rock 'n' roll escapism.[22] "AKA Driver," meanwhile, evokes late-night recklessness with a reference to NyQuil as a makeshift intoxicant, but the title was altered from "NyQuil Driver" due to trademark concerns from the product's owners.[23] The album's overall tone is darker and more introspective than They Might Be Giants' previous releases, mixing absurdity and humor with underlying melancholy and exhaustion from constant touring and creative pressures.[17] This blend culminates in "The End of the Tour," where fragmented observations of a weary road trip suggest emotional and physical burnout, delivered with a bittersweet detachment.[8] All tracks were written by John Flansburgh and John Linnell, except "AKA Driver," credited to band members Brian Doherty and Tony Maimone.[1]Release and promotion
Release details
John Henry was released on September 13, 1994, by Elektra Records.[2][24] The album marked the band's transition to a full live band sound following the success of their previous release, Flood, and was positioned in marketing as an evolution toward more conventional rock arrangements with expanded instrumentation.[24][2] It was initially available in CD and cassette formats, with no vinyl pressing at launch—the first They Might Be Giants album to omit vinyl upon release.[25] Special-edition Australian releases between 1995 and 1996 included a bonus live disc titled Live!! New York City, featuring recordings from a October 14, 1994, performance at the Ritz in New York City.[25][26] The lead single, "Snail Shell," preceded the album's launch on August 15, 1994, as a promotional CD.[27] The album's artwork and layout were designed by Mike Mills, incorporating imagery of children interacting with a statue of the American folk hero John Henry to evoke themes of mythology and childhood whimsy.[26]Singles and promotional efforts
The primary single from John Henry was "Snail Shell", released on August 15, 1994, as a promotional CD by Elektra Records.[27] The track peaked at #19 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[28] To build anticipation for the album, John Linnell created a HyperCard sampler in May 1994, distributed online through the alt.music.tmbg Usenet group and Elektra's website.[29] The interactive Macintosh application featured low-fidelity previews of several tracks, along with artwork and background information on the recording process.[29] The band further promoted John Henry through a guest appearance on MTV's 120 Minutes on October 9, 1994, where they hosted the episode and performed live versions of "AKA Driver" and "The End of the Tour".[30][31] Following the album's release, They Might Be Giants embarked on an extensive U.S. tour in late 1994 and into 1995, featuring the new full live band lineup of John Flansburgh, John Linnell, Tony Maimone on bass, and Brian Doherty on drums to demonstrate the rock-oriented arrangements. The tour included over 50 dates across theaters and clubs, emphasizing material from John Henry alongside earlier hits.Commercial performance
Chart positions
Upon its release in September 1994, John Henry debuted and peaked at number 61 on the US Billboard 200 chart, where it spent a total of four weeks.[32] This marked the band's strongest performance on the all-genre albums chart at the time. The lead single "Snail Shell" achieved greater success on the alternative rock format, peaking at number 19 on the Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart and remaining on the listing for eight weeks.[26] This positioned it as one of the band's more prominent radio hits during the era. John Henry remained They Might Be Giants' highest-charting album on the Billboard 200 until the release of Join Us in 2011, which debuted at number 32.[32] The album's short chart tenure underscored its appeal to a dedicated alternative audience amid the prevailing grunge trends of the mid-1990s, limiting broader mainstream crossover.[26]| Chart (1994) | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|
| Billboard 200 (US) | 61 | 4 |
| Hot Modern Rock Tracks (US) – "Snail Shell" | 19 | 8 |
Sales and certifications
John Henry did not receive any certifications from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[33] In the United States, the album achieved modest sales. Initial sales were bolstered by strong alternative radio airplay for the lead single "Snail Shell," which peaked at number 19 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart. However, momentum waned due to fan resistance to the album's departure from the duo's traditional lo-fi style toward a full-band rock sound. Internationally, sales remained modest, with no major certifications awarded in key markets. A special Australian edition featuring a bonus live CD helped generate additional regional interest but did not lead to notable commercial breakthroughs.[25] In comparison to the band's prior release Flood, which surpassed 1 million units sold and earned RIAA platinum certification, John Henry represented a commercial plateau.[34]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in September 1994, John Henry received mixed reviews from critics, who generally praised the album's energetic production and the band's shift to a full rock lineup but often criticized its uneven execution and departure from the duo's signature quirky synth-pop sound.[24] AllMusic awarded it three out of five stars, commending the robust arrangements while noting that the 20-track length led to inconsistencies, with some songs feeling filler-like amid the experimentation.[24] Entertainment Weekly graded it a B, appreciating the "live-band vigor" and punchy horns that brought fresh dynamism, though it faulted certain lyrics for coming across as forced or overly self-conscious. The Chicago Tribune rated it 2.5 out of four stars, offering a mixed assessment of the pivot away from the group's eccentric, synth-heavy style, suggesting it traded whimsy for conventional rock tropes without fully committing. In the UK, NME scored it seven out of ten, highlighting the effective use of horns and guitars as signs of artistic growth, positioning the album as a maturation step that retained the duo's wit amid the expanded sound. Overall, the contemporary consensus viewed John Henry as a ambitious but flawed effort, with acclaim for its polished production values tempered by concerns that it diluted They Might Be Giants' distinctive eccentricity.[35]Retrospective views
In the years following its release, John Henry has garnered renewed appreciation from critics for marking They Might Be Giants' transition to a full-band sound, evolving from their earlier synthesizer-driven quirkiness toward a more mature alternative rock palette. A 2013 review on Sputnikmusic described the album as the band's "masterpiece," praising its genre-spanning blend of alt-rock, experimental elements, jazz, folk, and pop, while noting the darker tone introduced by live instrumentation that replaced the drum machine. This shift was seen as a bold maturation, allowing the group to explore intertwined themes of driving, music, and relationships across its 55-minute runtime, ultimately recommending it as their finest work. Similarly, a 2021 retrospective on Musicboard hailed it as a natural progression despite initial fan controversy, awarding it 4 out of 5 stars for balancing the duo's surreal melodies with dynamic punch.[17][36] User-driven aggregators reflect a solid, if understated, consensus among listeners, with Album of the Year reporting a critic score of 80/100 based on five reviews and user rankings placing it at #111 for 1994 albums among 181 ratings, often lauded for its goofy yet clever creativity and fun variety. On Rate Your Music, it holds a 3.7/5 average from 1,899 ratings, where reviewers frequently highlight its underrated status as an eclectic alt-rock standout that holds its own against 1990s peers, with one noting it as the band's "finest" for fully realizing the full-band potential. Specific tracks like "Snail Shell" receive praise for their catchy choruses and well-produced energy, while "The End of the Tour" is celebrated as a rousing closer that exemplifies the album's front-loaded strengths and thematic depth. A 2025 user review on Album of the Year echoed this, scoring it 80/100 and commending "Snail Shell" and "AKA Driver" as some of the band's best jams.[37][38][19] Retrospectives position John Henry as a pivotal entry that bridged the group's quirky origins with rock maturity, ushering in their live performance era and influencing subsequent releases like Factory Showroom (1996), which retained the backing band while experimenting further. The official They Might Be Giants site underscores this as the moment they expanded from tape-recorder accompaniment to a fuller live sound, a change that, despite early backlash, enabled greater dynamism in their catalog. A 2011 Popdose guide noted its contrarian appeal, suggesting that while initially divisive, the album's immediate strengths have aged well, contributing to its reevaluation as an essential, if overlooked, evolution in the band's discography.[2][39]Legacy
Cultural impact and appearances in media
The release of John Henry marked a pivotal transition for They Might Be Giants from their earlier duo format relying on drum machines and synths to a full-fledged touring rock band, incorporating live instrumentation and a backing ensemble that expanded their sound and performance capabilities.[8] This shift solidified the band's evolution into a more traditional rock outfit, enabling larger-scale tours and a broader stage presence that defined their live shows for years to come.[40] While the album's rock-oriented production was praised by some for its energy, it drew backlash from a portion of longtime fans who boycotted early shows in protest of the departure from the group's quirky, minimalist roots; band member John Flansburgh has downplayed the extent of such reactions in later reflections.[41] The John Henry era's backing lineup contributed significantly to the band's longevity, remaining relatively stable through the late 1990s and early 2000s until personnel adjustments in 2004, allowing consistent touring and recording that sustained their career trajectory.[42] In media, instrumental versions of tracks from the album appeared prominently: "No One Knows My Plan" served as the opening theme and "The End of the Tour" as the closing theme for the first season of the TBS/Cartoon Network series Cartoon Planet in 1995, enhancing the show's eclectic, humorous vibe.[43] Additionally, "No One Knows My Plan" was featured in a 2005 PBS Kids promotional spot for "Big Big Friend Day," tying into the network's family-friendly programming.[44] Within They Might Be Giants' own lore, John Henry is often referenced as a symbolic "human vs. machine" turning point, echoing the folk legend of the album's namesake and representing the band's embrace of live human musicians over electronic production.[45]Reissues and remasters
The album John Henry has undergone several reissues since its original release, primarily emphasizing vinyl formats and supplementary demo material, though no major remasters occurred until 2025. In 2013, Asbestos Records released the first vinyl edition as a double LP, limited to 1,500 copies, marking the album's debut on the format without any remastering and sourced directly from the original CD.[46][47] In 2018, Idlewild Recordings issued John Henry Demos, a collection of full-band studio demos recorded during the album's 1993 sessions with producer Pat DiNello, available on CD and as a limited 180-gram orange vinyl edition with a bonus 7-inch single; these were newly remixed and mastered in high-fidelity audio.[48][49] The 2025 reissue by Idlewild Recordings commemorated the album's 30th anniversary with a remastered double LP on 180-gram "evergreen" vinyl, hand-numbered and limited to 1,000 copies, featuring select live rarities from the John Henry era on side D; a violet variant followed in December.[50][51] Beyond these, the album lacks significant remastering efforts and has been accessible via digital streaming services since the 2000s. Special Australian editions from 1995–1996 bundled the original CD with a bonus live disc containing alternate performances and rarities.[16][52]Credits
Track listing
All tracks on John Henry are written by John Flansburgh and John Linnell of They Might Be Giants, except where noted. The album comprises 20 tracks with a total runtime of 57:07.[25]| No. | Title | Length | Writer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Subliminal" | 2:45 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 2 | "Snail Shell" | 3:20 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 3 | "Sleeping in the Flowers" | 4:30 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 4 | "Unrelated Thing" | 2:30 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 5 | "AKA Driver" | 3:14 | Flansburgh, Linnell, Maimone, Doherty |
| 6 | "I Should Be Allowed to Think" | 3:09 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 7 | "Extra Savoir-Faire" | 2:48 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 8 | "Why Must I Be Sad?" | 4:08 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 9 | "Spy" | 3:06 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 10 | "O, Do Not Forsake Me" | 2:30 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 11 | "No One Knows My Plan" | 2:37 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 12 | "Dirt Bike" | 3:05 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 13 | "Destination Moon" | 2:27 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 14 | "A Self Called Nowhere" | 3:22 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 15 | "Meet James Ensor" | 1:33 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 16 | "Thermostat" | 3:11 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 17 | "Window" | 1:00 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 18 | "Out of Jail" | 2:38 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
| 19 | "Stomp Box" | 1:55 | Flansburgh |
| 20 | "The End of the Tour" | 3:18 | Flansburgh, Linnell |
