Lucky Jim is an album by the American band the Gun Club, released in 1993.[3][4] It was the band's final studio album.[5][6] The album was "dedicated to the cities of Saigon and London, Fall and Winter 1991".
Trouser Press called the album "an eerily austere record that displays the more spectral side of Pierce's voice, particularly on the dejected title track and 'Cry to Me' ... the manner in which he replaces post-adolescent rage with full-blown adult emptiness is mighty impressive."[8]Billboard deemed it "a haunting record that reflected Pierce's experiences in Japan and Vietnam, countries to which he traveled several times in the early '90s."[12]The Morning Call noted that "the tempos are slower, the song structures are more dynamic ... and there is an increased attention to melody and texture."[13]
AllMusic wrote that Lucky Jim "didn't just signify the passage of a man, but the disappearance of the only real American rock band left in the world."[9] The Spin Alternative Record Guide concluded that, "if the Gun Club's execution on the elegiac Lucky Jim directly recalls the Delta only once ('Anger Blues'), the album is permeated with a sadness and displacement fundamental to the deep blues."[11]Record Collector deemed the songs "gutbucket
blues and melancholy acoustic outings," writing that "Pierce found a new kind of intimate personal blues towards the end."[14]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Jeffrey Lee Pierce; except where noted.