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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Richman's coolest album
Richman's 1992 album I, Jonathan has got to be his coolest. He waxes nostalgic on several tracks without becoming mired in sap. "Parties In the U.S.A." is one of his best, built on a groove (and some of the lyrics) from the '60s hit "Hang On Sloopy." "Velvet Underground" is a tribute to one of Jonathan's favorite bands, performed Chuck Berry-style except for the mid-song...
Published on June 7, 2002 by Gena Chereck

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Strange duck
Jonathan Richman is a fantastic, strange guy. I love a large percentage of his music, but this album was just a little too Raffi-esque for me. I adore You Can't Talk To The Dude, so I purchased this album just to get a good copy of that song.

My favorite by him is Jonathan Goes Country.
Published on March 9, 2007 by J. Street


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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Richman's coolest album, June 7, 2002
By 
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
Richman's 1992 album I, Jonathan has got to be his coolest. He waxes nostalgic on several tracks without becoming mired in sap. "Parties In the U.S.A." is one of his best, built on a groove (and some of the lyrics) from the '60s hit "Hang On Sloopy." "Velvet Underground" is a tribute to one of Jonathan's favorite bands, performed Chuck Berry-style except for the mid-song break in which Richman slips into a spot-on Lou Reed impression to perform a snatch of the Velvets' "Sister Ray." A six-minute re-recording of 1983's "That Summer Feeling" sonically recalls the Velvets' "Sunday Morning" and "All Tomorrow's Parties." It's a beautiful song about the gulf between childhood experience and adult nostalgia; the "summer feeling" refers to childhood filtered through the adult mind so that only the best stuff is remembered, and Jonathan insists that it is a seductive, deceptive, and potentially destructive force ("you'll throw away everything for it"). This tour-de-force is followed by the zingy surf-rock of "Grunion Run," the jangly love ode "A Higher Power," and "Twilight in Boston," Richman's dreamy spoken-word tribute to his hometown. Other gems include the tense "You Can't Talk to the Dude" and the funky "I Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar." I'd put this right up there with Having A Party (1991) as one of Jonathan's most consistently entertaining efforts.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars JoJo as focused and fine as you're going to find him, September 23, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
If you're a Jonathan Richman fan, you probably approach each new album purchase with a mix of exitement and trepidation. You ask yourself, "Will there be more than one or two great numbers on this one?"

If you've been wondering what's become of the JoJo who turned you on your head-- here he is! This is head and shoulders above anything else he released in the 90's. You've got to back to 1979's "Back in Your Life," or 1975's "The Modern Lovers" to find as complete and satisfying a mix of pure, clear Jonathan.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars His Best Album, January 24, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
I own about 10 of his albums, and have seen him live countless times. In my judgment, this is his very best work so far. I highly recommend it.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The manchild Jonathan Richman explores his deepest concerns, December 13, 2004
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
First, before reviewing this wonderful album, a few words for the un-initiated about Jonathan, who is way too childlike to address as Mr. Richman. Jonathan is a boyish, charming singer-guitarist who wears his heart on his sleeve. His voice is seemingly untrained, his guitar playing unsophisticated, but his songs are honest and emotional. What Jonathan lacks in musicality, he makes up for in passion and personality; more than any other performer I know, he lets us right into his heart. Depending on the listener's personality, this sloppy sentimentality is either a complete turn-off or a reason to keep showing up at his concerts.

On this album, "I, Jonathan," (1992) he continues to chronicle conflicts in his marriage with Gail. We see his then-wife mentioned by name in a previous album, "Modern Lovers '88" (1987), in a celebratory song which has only the lyrics "Gail Loves Me" repeated over and over. In his 1991 live album "Having a Party", he sings of how he got together with her just for fun, but Gail treated the relationship more seriously, and she never laughed at his jokes. In other songs, Jonathan reveals himself to be an ENFP on the Myers-Briggs personality scale - a emotional, intuitive, feeling, perceiving person, in essence, a man-child. Gail - as Jonathan describes her in song - comes across as sober, cautious in action ("Make a Mistake for Me Today", on 1989's "Jonathan Richman" album), conservative in dress ("Everyday Clothes," also "Jonathan Richman"), perhaps even a bit icy ("Closer," also on "Jonathan Richman"). Gail is an INTJ - introverted, intuitive, thinking, judger - close to the opposite of Jonathan. Benny and Joon these two are not. Gail is the grown-up.

On this album, "I, Jonathan," Jonathan again addresses themes of personality conflict, of his free spirit bumping into the constraints of Gail (and others') logical, orderly and organized thinking. Even on songs which are not relationship songs, these issues of freedom and judgmentalism percolate to the surface. He celebrates the seminal rock band "The Velvet Underground" for being "wild like the USA ... bold and brash, sharp and rude." In "Rooming House on Venice Beach," he reminisces about a simpler, happier time when he was unencumbered by possessions, money, locked doors, or... relationships. "Parties in the U.S.A" describes the police breaking up a quiet coffee-drinking gathering of innocents, wrongfully accusing them of being too loud. In "I Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar," he contrasts the laissez-faire, hip-shaking, rock-and-roll bar with a more conservative, uptight, and self-conscious bar where patrons drink in sips. Is this how he views his marriage to Gail? In the swooning "That Summer Feeling," he pleads (apparently in futility) that sentimentalism and nostalgic revelry will overcome and soften the listener (Gail?). Jonathan's longing for freedom is crystallized in "Tandem Jump," about parachuting. (This latter song is thematically connected to "Floating," on "Surrender" (1996), in which he invisions himself physically distanced from his family.) Jonathan's free spirit is in chains.

On his relationship songs, he addresses these ideas more directly. He sings "'You Can't Talk to the Dude' and things will never be right until you go." Someone can't converse, someone else's sense of humor has gotten worse. The pronouns are changed around, perhaps, but when he sings about the dude's bad eating habits (cross-reference "I Eat with Gusto!" on "Jonathan Richman"), it becomes clear that Jonathan is the dude who can't communicate. Gail, being straight-laced, can't stand his manners (or lack thereof) and his inability to communicate is as annoying to her, as her mincing his words is annoying to him.

Even in the song "Higher Power," which thematically and musically parallels "Gail Loves Me," Jonathan celebrates his initial meeting with Gail. "It's magic, it's magic, the way we got together," he exclaims. But ... "I knew it from that first kiss, so stingy and so spare," and most tellingly, "I knew how it would be, the way she hated me."

All told, these are brilliant, wonderful songs; I've been listening to this CD non-stop for several months while driving around in my car. The music itself, even when singing about sad and troubling things, is happy and uplifting. The emotional honesty here is breathtaking, but it is the sadness and knowledge that the relationship is ultimately doomed (as chronicled by later Jonathan albums), which helps this album stand up to repeated listening, as it mixes the sour into the sweet.

More than anything, this music makes me feel like I have a friend who understands me, in Jonathan Richman.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars the Velvets' true heir, July 18, 2001
By 
glubak "glubak" (Mosman, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
Jonathan Richman has picked up on two elements of the Velvet Underground that most of their followers missed. The first is the core of sweetness in songs like "I'll be Your Mirror", "Lisa Says" or "Rock and Roll". There's a similar spirit of innocence and joy in Jonathan's songs, and not a scrap of cheap irony in a song like "I Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar", for example.

The second element is the Velvets' musical roots in simple 50's rock'n'roll. Jonathan has caught that sound beautifully on this album, in all its lo-fi glory.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jonathan Makes Me Cry!, July 27, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
This album is on my top ten! If you have never seen Jonathan live, I suggest you do the first chance you get! These are the songs anyone with a heart and soul can truly relate to! They make you feel all warm and runny inside! "That Summer Feeling" almost makes me cry every time I hear it and I've listened to it many times. He can do the Velvet Underground almost better than they could themselves! "Tandem Jump" and "I Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar" are the rockin' and rollin' pick me ups. I've only seen him live once, but when he played Lesbian Bar he got DOWN complete with fan kick! I am going to see him over Labor Day weekend in Seattle and I can hardly wait! I'd highly recommend almost any of his albums, but this one is my favorite!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Have. For Any Fan., December 15, 1998
By 
Ron Sansone (Hazlet, New Jersey USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
If you like Jonathan Richamn and you don't have this CD then don't wait a minute longer. You'll never regret it. I'm going to order the CD for a friend of mine who spent some very fine years at Boston College. He'll love and so will you. Pure Rock & Roll. Great quality recordings. You can't beat it.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Richman's Triumphant Kick Into the 1990s!, January 28, 2003
By 
Ferdy Belland (Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
Jonathan Richman shuffled his way into the 1990s with his quirky, unique vision still smiling and unruffled (save his great hair). On "I, Jonathan" he still proudly boasts his influences on his rolled-up, soup-stained sleeve: mid-60s garage rave-ups ("Parties In The USA"), sloppy mid-60s instrumental B-sides ("Grunion Run," "Tandem Jump"), and the Velvet Underground ("Velvet Underground"). There's a smartass humour in Richman's songs that no one can even come close to, and he manages to jam his tongue firmly in his cheek while straight-facedly presenting immortal songs ("I Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar")...even an old-school sock-hop love ballad turns on him in the best possible way ("Higher Power"). But even when you nab away Jonathan Richman's funnybone (but leave him his scuffed sneakers, please), the clever tunesmith remains as tall and gangly as ever - especially in plaintive ballads about nostalgia and mortality ("That Summer Feeling") and paeans to his old hometown ("Twilight In Boston"). His voice may be mellowing with age, but the same guy who wrote "Roadrunner" and "Rockin' Rockin' Leprechauns" is still there; his frantic electric guitar is drenched in reverb, and from the sound of the banging-on-an-oil-can drum beats and the chanted gang-vocal harmonies, you know damn well the guys in his backup band were having one hell of a good time doing these songs. And who wouldn't? We sure as hell enjoy listening to the finished results. An definite artistic highpoint for one of the 20th Century's more under-appreciated American rock songwriters.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars So good it was stolen, June 27, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
Years ago while I was on vacation I heard this cd while in a little shop in the islands. I was so taken by the music, I asked the clerk what the title was. I very seldom buy albums or listen to music so this was very unusual. After several years of looking for the title, which for some reason I always remembered, I finally found the CD in a local shop. I absolutely loved it and would frequently listen to it when I worked out of my home. Several years ago, our house was robbed and the cd was stolen. Some things were recovered but this CD was not. For some reason, I never remembered the artists' name only the title. I tried to find the title several times at our local shops and even searched the internet for the title. IMAGINE my delight when I rented the Mary movie. I immediately recognized the voice of the singer and had the family stop the movie and rerun the beginning credits so I could get the name. Wonderful album, I'm placing my order immediately.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An old friend, October 13, 2004
This review is from: I Jonathan (Audio CD)
This is one of the warmest, friendliest, most enjoyable albums I have ever heard, and the album that really got me into JR. From the familiar bass line of the opening track to the captivating bedtime story of the final cut, with the standout "That Summer Feeling" in between, Jonathan immediately becomes an old friend. He really is a national treasure, as anyone who has seen him live will tell you. A QUESTION: Has anyone else had problems playing this CD? I have owned two copies (I bought the first one used, and thought that might be the problem, so I gave it to a friend and bought a brand new copy) of this disc, and both seem to stutter and skip at the same places. The problem is worse on some CD players than others but is always there. Anyone else had this experience? My car stereo has a similar problem with Yo La Tengo's "Upside Down" EP, and has had it from the beginning.
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I Jonathan
I Jonathan by Jonathan Richman (Audio CD - 1992)
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