Cuttin' Heads | ||||
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Studio album by John Mellencamp | ||||
Released | October 16, 2001 | |||
Recorded | July 2000-June 2001 | |||
Genre | Heartland rock | |||
Length | 40:02 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Producer | John Mellencamp | |||
John Mellencamp chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Aggregate scores | |
Source | Rating |
Metacritic | (73/100) |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | |
Billboard | (favorable) |
Blender | |
E! Online | B+ |
Entertainment Weekly | B+ |
Nude as the News | (8/10) |
Q | |
Rolling Stone | |
Uncut | |
USA Today |
Cuttin' Heads is an album by American singer-songwriter and musician John Mellencamp, released on October 16, 2001. It was his second album for Columbia Records, and it peaked at #15 on the Billboard 200 in early November 2001. The album is noteworthy for having only one single, the India.Arie duet "Peaceful World."
"'Peaceful World' was extracted from a conversation with Pat Peterson, who's been singing backup in my touring band since 1981," Mellencamp explained to the Denver Post in an August 2001 feature. "She's my age, and I asked her, 'What's the one thing that's really disturbing to you?' There was no question about it - it's how this new rap music is really harmful to the black race.
"You have the new Uncle Tom, the guy wagging the $200,000 watch and saying, ... 'Gimme the money, man, look what I got that you ain't got ... I'll say whatever you want me to say, and when this (ends), I'll just go back to whatever I'm doing, and I don't care about the damage that I've done.' Meanwhile, white kids in suburbs who buy these records find it entertaining if not comical half the time. They have a really distorted view of what the black race is about. It's a very bad thing."
Chuck D of the rap group Public Enemy sang a verse on the album's title track, which addresses Mellencamp's annoyance and chagrin at the use of the "N" word in rap music. "They just had a rap seminar in New York, and Chuck got up and said, 'Hey, look, I just came back from the cornfields of Indiana, and Mellencamp said something in a song that you guys should have been saying about yourselves 10 years ago!,'" Mellencamp told the Denver Post in the aforementioned August 2001 article. "I'm just an observer here - I thought coming from me alone, it would be obtuse. But Chuck is the conscience of the whole black community. He was the only choice to do this song with me, because he's the only guy that never participated in it, always kept his integrity and his wits about him.
"Columbia Records died when they heard it. They don't want any problems because of this song. But they were very understanding - they just said, 'Why do you want to do this?' I said, 'Hey, man, I'm a ... folk singer. If I'm not going to have some issues here, that makes me a puppet.'"