Gimme Fiction
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Release type:What's this?
studio album
First released:
May 9 2005

Overview Edit

Gimme Fiction is the fifth album from Austin, Texas indie rock band Spoon, released on May 10, 2005. It debuted at #44 on the Billboard 200. "I Turn My Camera On" has been released as a single, and garnered some radio-play. Some versions of the album also come with a bonus disc. "Sister Jack" was also featured on the Wedding Crashers soundtrack. "I Turn My Camera On" was featured on Bones episode "The Man in the S.U.V". It was also used in The Simpsons episode "Any Given Sundance", and in an episode of Friday Night Lights. "I Summon You" plays through the conclusion to the Scrubs episode "My Perspective". It was also featured in an episode of the now-defunct TV show "Veronica Mars." "The Infinite Pet" was heard in the film (500) Days of Summer.

The soundtrack of the movie Stranger than Fiction contains versions of songs from Gimme Fiction, including "I Turn My Camera On" and "My Mathematical Mind". "My Mathematical Mind" is also featured in a trailer for the 2008 motion picture 21.

In a 2005 back page column for the magazine Entertainment Weekly, Stephen King named "I Summon You" his favorite song of the year.

In 2009, Rhapsody ranked the album at #19 on its "100 Best Albums of the Decade" list.

The Overview appearing in this section is attributed to Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gimme_Fiction. Portions of this Overview may be available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, version 3.0 or any later version, available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/. Additional terms may apply. See Wikipedia Terms of Use for details.

This particular version Edit

Record label:
Catalog number:
OLE 668-2
Release dates:
  • May 10 2005 in United States

Genres

Indie, Alternative Rock. Vote on Genres

What do Amazon.com customers think?

5 stars Gimme gimme gimme
Spoon is one of the best, and also the most underappreciated, bands in the wide world of indierock. And after the twin masterpieces of "Girls Can Tell" and "Kill the Moonlight," they had a lot to follow up on. They could have easily rested on their laurels, and produced a new album full of nothing new at all.

But they didn't. And the result is worth waiting for.

Their newest album, "Gimme Fiction," actually takes that kind of rock and builds on it. Nowherer is it more obvious than in the opene…
Written by E. A Solinas "ea_solinas"
3 stars Reliably solid, but trails off some in latter portion
3 1/2

Just missing their typically way-above-average album status, the indie pop rock group's 5th release starts strong with their witty and infectious songwriting taking front and center, but looses some wind throughout a decent but less noticeable second half.
Written by IRate

Track listing Edit

Credits Edit

  1. engineer

    1. Britt Daniel [Mixed By]
    2. Greg Calbi [Mastered By]
    3. Jim Eno [Mixed By]
    4. Mike McCarthy [Mixed By]
  1. performer

    1. Ames Asbell [Viola]
    2. Britt Daniel [Piano [U.t.], Electric Piano [Rhodes]]
    3. Sara Nelson [Cello]
  2. producer

    1. John Vanderslice [Producer [Additional]]

Other versions Edit

Gimme Fiction 4 tracks format: 1 x CD
release dates: May 9 2005 in United Kingdom, May 10 2005 in United States
view details
Gimme Fiction 11 tracks format: 1 x vinyl
record label: Merge Records
release dates: May 10 2005
view details
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Trivia Edit

  • Recorded July–September 2004 at Public Hi-Fi.

Websites Edit

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