Final Exam is an album by the American musician Loudon Wainwright III, released in 1978.[1] He supported it with a North American tour.[2] The album was re-released on Telarc in 2007, coupled with his 1976 album, T Shirt.[3] In 1995, Wainwright acknowledged that it was his least favorite of his albums.[4]
Production
The album was produced by John Lissauer.[5] Wainwright was backed by the band Slow Train.[6] "Pretty Little Martha" is a tribute to his daughter Martha Wainwright.[7] "Heaven and Mud" is about an attempt at sobriety.[8] "Golfin' Blues" is about the golfing life, in the style of a Delta blues song.[8] "Mr. Guilty" is a parody of the tropes of country music.[9] The title track is addressed to a high school student taking spring semester exams.[10]
The New York Times wrote that Wainwright "deals primarily with a quirky kind of humor that seems almost to mask emotion."[14]The Commercial Appeal considered Final Exam to be Wainwright's best, writing that he "operates without the philosophical cleverness of Randy Newman, preferring instead to use a straightforward, crazed style to push his point across."[15] The Journal & Courier praised Wainwright's acoustic guitar playing.[16]
The Arizona Daily Star noted Wainwright's "mind like a steel trap ... a warped steel trap."[8] The Star Tribune opined that "the clever cynic ... has become a television sit-com writer."[17]The Morning Call determined that Wainwright "furthers his reputation as an unconventional, witty songwriter ... but there are no real standouts."[9]
In 1983, The Philadelphia Inquirer labeled the album "self-pitying and melodramatic."[18] Reviewing the reissue, Music Week deemed it an "enjoyable [fusion] of his more traditional folk style with a harder, rockier edge."[19]
^Sullivan, Jim (20 Nov 1981). "Loudon Laughs at Life". Arts. The Boston Globe. p. 1.
^Takiff, Jonathan (4 Apr 1978). "School Daze". Philadelphia Daily News. p. 36.
^Daoust, Phil (23 May 2007). "G2: Radio: Pick of the day". The Guardian. p. 32.
^Terrell, Steve (11 Aug 1995). "Everything About Wainwright Is in His Lyrics". Pasatiempo. The Santa Fe New Mexican. p. 44.
^Patterson, Rob (16 May 1978). "Final Exam Loudon Wainwright". The Cincinnati Post. NEA. p. 15.
^Wainwright III, Loudon (2017). Liner Notes: On Parents & Children, Exes & Excess, Death & Decay & a Few of My Other Favorite Things. Blue Rider Press. p. 190.
^Bledsoe, Wayne (29 Mar 1996). "Wainwright's Motto: If You Live It, Write It". Knoxville News Sentinel. p. T10.
^ abcMcNally, Joel (9 Apr 1978). "On his new album...". Arizona Daily Star. SPS. p. 4G.
^ abSeigendall, Jane (15 Apr 1978). "Records". Weekender. The Morning Call. p. 49.
^Mullinax, Gary (30 Apr 1978). "Wainwright: Caught". The Morning News. p. D2.