This article is about the Debbie Harry album. For the Finnish ice hockey team commonly known as KooKoo, see KooKoo (Liiga). For the Persian genre of food commonly known as KooKoo, see Kuku (food). For the comedy duo who shortened their name to Koo Koo on September 19, 2023, see Koo Koo Kanga Roo.
KooKoo was recorded while Harry and boyfriend Chris Stein were taking a break from the band Blondie. The album was produced by Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards of the R&B band Chic, who had just had major success working with Diana Ross on her 1980 album Diana. Harry and Stein first met the pair at the Power Station recording studio in New York while Blondie were recording their 1979 album Eat to the Beat, and they remained good friends in the intervening years. KooKoo was one of three albums to be (co)written and produced by Rodgers and Edwards in 1981, the other two being Chic's fifth album Take It Off and Johnny Mathis' I Love My Lady, which remained unreleased until 2017.
KooKoo was digitally remastered and re-issued on compact disc with two bonus tracks (the 12″ versions of "Backfired" and "The Jam Was Moving") by EMI in the United Kingdom in 1994, and by Razor & Tie in the United States in 1999, this time with just one bonus track. The album was reissued again in the US by Gold Legion.com in 2011 (the 30th anniversary of the album's release). This reissue includes three bonus tracks (both of the aforementioned 12″ versions, and also the rare extended mix of "Inner City Spillover") as well as extensive liner notes. In May 2023, a deluxe edition was released, consisting of the original album and a bonus disk of remixes pressed in transparent vinyl, and a lenticular cover.
Promotion
The cover art for the album was created by Swiss artist H.R. Giger, known for his design work on the 1979 sci-fi/horror film Alien. Based on a photograph of Harry taken by the renowned photographer Brian Aris, Giger created several variations of the cover (another of which is seen on the album's inner sleeve) in what Harry described as a combination of punk, acupuncture and sci-fi. Harry stated that the album title came to her after she saw Giger's completed work, and although she had misgivings about the conceptual ideas behind the artwork (as she did not identify either the album or herself as "punk"), she was suitably impressed to use it anyway.[2]
For the promotion of KooKoo, Chrysalis Records planned to display large posters of the album cover in various stations of the London Underground. However, officials deemed the image of Harry with metal skewers going through her face and neck to be too disturbing. A television ad campaign went ahead, however.
Promo videos were made for the tracks "Backfired" and "Now I Know You Know", both directed by Giger and filmed at his studio in Switzerland. "Backfired" featured a dark-haired Harry dancing superimposed over a backdrop of Giger's distinctive artwork, with Giger himself appearing in a semi-translucent face mask. "Now I Know You Know" featured Harry in a long black wig and a form-fitting bodysuit painted with Giger's unusual artwork, dancing around in a small set furnished with Giger's "bio-mechanical" design work.
Singles
Two singles were released from the album: "Backfired", which peaked at number 24 in Australia, number 32 in the UK and number 43 in the US in August 1981, and "The Jam Was Moving", which reached number 82 in the US.
A third single, "Chrome", was only released in some parts of Europe, but failed to chart. Another track, "Jump Jump", was only released as a single in Peru.
"Chrome" served as the B-side to "The Jam was Moving", only being issued in Germany as a single and in the US as a promotional 12-inch single only.
In The Boston Phoenix, Ken Emerson gave the album a mixed review, writing that "Harry comes across on KooKoo as inaccessible, invulnerable, and creepy. The congealment of her character that began with the success of Heart of Glass is now complete: she’s an ice-cold icon. ... [T]hough KooKoo lacks the playful energy and innocence of Parallel Lines (1978), Blondie’s best album, it’s far more accomplished and fully realized than either of the band’s subsequent LPs. ... You may dislike the destination, but KooKoo knows exactly where it’s going."[7] Rob Sheffield wrote in the Spin Alternative Record Guide (1995), "KooKoo is disappointingly diffuse, and it's easy to hear what went wrong: while Harry meekly imitates the suave funk of Chic's classic Real People, Rodgers reverts to his true roots in European art-rock."[1]
In 2021, Rich Wilhelm described it as a flawed but beguiling experiment that paved the way for Let’s Dance and Like a Virgin.[8]