DaDa
DaDa is the eighth solo studio album by American rock singer Alice Cooper, released on September 28, 1983, by Warner Bros. Records.[1] Produced by Bob Ezrin, it marked Cooper's final studio album before he sought treatment for alcoholism and made a sober comeback with the 1986 album Constrictor.[1] The album blends hard rock, new wave, and experimental elements, running 42:15 in length.[2]Creation
Background and conception
Following the release of his 1981 album Special Forces, the final installment in what would become known as his "blackout trilogy," Alice Cooper (born Vincent Furnier) experienced a severe relapse into alcoholism, marked by heavy drinking and cocaine use that led to blackouts and erratic behavior, profoundly influencing the chaotic and surreal tone of his subsequent project. This period represented a low point in Cooper's career and personal life, with the substance abuse exacerbating his mental instability and contributing to a sense of absurdity that permeated his creative output.[3] DaDa was conceived as a surreal, experimental album drawing inspiration from the early 20th-century Dada art movement, which emphasized absurdity, dreamlike elements, and rejection of conventional logic to mirror Cooper's fractured mental state during his addiction. The title itself nods to Dadaism's focus on the irrational and nonsensical, with the album's themes exploring twisted personalities and psychological turmoil as a reflection of Cooper's inner chaos. This artistic direction allowed Cooper to channel his personal demons into a cohesive, if disjointed, narrative of madness and self-destruction.[4][5] Under pressure from Warner Bros. Records, who held Cooper to a contractual obligation for one final album amid his declining commercial fortunes and erratic reliability, he reunited with longtime producer Bob Ezrin after a six-year hiatus since Lace and Whiskey (1977), aiming for a potential comeback. Ezrin's involvement was pivotal in steering the project, bringing structure to Cooper's hazy vision while co-writing several tracks. Early songwriting sessions commenced in 1982 at Cooper's home in Arizona, where he collaborated with guitarist Dick Wagner and other session musicians, drawing from his alcohol-fueled subconscious to develop raw ideas that evolved into the album's experimental edge.[5] Cooper's deteriorating health during the recording process infused the work with urgency and raw experimentation, culminating in his hospitalization in fall 1983 for alcoholism and cirrhosis of the liver, shortly after the album's completion and release. This crisis underscored the album's themes of personal collapse and pushed its dadaist absurdity as a cathartic outlet for Cooper's turmoil, though he later recalled little of the process due to blackouts.[3][6]Recording and production
The recording sessions for DaDa took place primarily in 1983 at Phase One Studios in Toronto, Ontario, with additional work at E.S.P. Studios in Buttonville, Ontario.[7] These locations allowed for a collaborative environment leveraging local talent and facilities suited to the album's experimental approach. The sessions marked Bob Ezrin's return as producer after a six-year hiatus from working with Cooper, bringing his experience from earlier collaborations like Killer and School's Out.[1] Ezrin handled production duties, supported by associate producers Dick Wagner and Robert "Ringo" Hrycyna, while engineering was led by Ezrin, Hrycyna, and Lenny DeRose, with assistance from Ringo Hrycyna and Carol Saxton.[8] The core lineup featured Cooper on vocals and synthesizer, Wagner on guitar, bass, and backing vocals, and Toronto-based musician Graham Shaw on synthesizers including the Oberheim OB-X and Roland Jupiter, along with backing vocals. Additional contributors included bassist Prakash John, drummer Dean Castronovo, guitarists Ken Kessel, Vinnie Moore, and others such as Steve Fagen on piano and keyboards, with Ezrin contributing Fairlight CMI programming, keyboards, drums, percussion, and backing vocals. Backing vocals were provided by Karen Hendricks, Lisa Dal Bello, and Sarah Ezrin.[8] The production emphasized synthesizers and the Fairlight CMI sampler to generate experimental, unconventional sounds, often employing multi-tracking techniques to build dense, chaotic layers reflective of the album's disjointed aesthetic.[9] Sessions were marked by significant challenges stemming from Cooper's peak alcoholism, which left him in a constant state of intoxication and malnourishment, impairing his recall and performance capabilities.[10] Ezrin navigated these difficulties by incorporating improvised elements born from Cooper's unstable condition, transforming potential setbacks into raw, creative energy that infused the recordings with an authentic sense of disorder.[3]Musical content
Style and instrumentation
DaDa marked a notable evolution in Alice Cooper's sound, fusing new wave, synth-pop, hard rock, and experimental art rock elements, a stark departure from the theatrical shock rock that defined his 1970s output. This blend reflected the album's embrace of 1980s electronic innovation while retaining traces of Cooper's dramatic flair, creating a surreal, multi-layered sonic landscape that prioritized atmosphere over conventional song structures.[11][12][13] Central to the album's instrumentation was the prominent role of synthesizers, including the cutting-edge Fairlight CMI for digital sampling and sequencing, which handled much of the melodic and textural foundation, alongside Graham Shaw's contributions on the Oberheim OB-X and Roland Jupiter-8 for lush, analog keyboard tones. Dick Wagner provided driving guitars and bass lines, adding hard rock grit and melodic hooks, while Bob Ezrin contributed keyboards, programmed drums, and percussion that incorporated unconventional sampled sounds to enhance the experimental edge. This setup emphasized electronic textures over traditional rock arrangements, with drums often derived from Fairlight programs rather than live kits, evoking a robotic, otherworldly quality.[5][8][14] Track-specific highlights underscore these innovations: the opening "DaDa" deploys electronic dissonance through layered Fairlight samples and echoing effects, building a Floydian sense of foreboding and surreal tension. In "Former Lee Warmer," Wagner's guitar work introduces more straightforward rock propulsion, blending with subtle synth undercurrents for a haunting yet accessible melody that contrasts the album's noisier experiments.[15][16] The production, helmed by Ezrin, drew on 1980s trends like digital sampling to amplify the album's dadaist surrealism, creating disjointed sonic collages that mirrored the era's synth experimentation while grounding them in Cooper's penchant for theatrical eccentricity, akin to the quirky new wave explorations of bands like Talking Heads and Devo.[13][5]Themes and song analysis
The album DaDa draws its central themes from absurdity and madness, heavily inspired by the Dada art movement's emphasis on irrationality and anti-establishment surrealism, as reflected in the title and cover art derived from Salvador Dalí's painting Slave Market with the Disappearing Bust of Voltaire.[4] These elements mirror Alice Cooper's personal turmoil during recording, including his struggles with alcoholism and deteriorating mental health, which infused the lyrics with raw depictions of inner chaos and familial dysfunction.[5] The work also offers societal critique through satirical lenses on identity, conformity, and American culture, portraying a fractured psyche navigating escapism and alienation without resorting to the overt horror motifs of Cooper's earlier albums like Welcome to My Nightmare.[15] The title track "DaDa" serves as a manic opener, featuring repetitive nonsense chants and fragmented dialogue simulating a disjointed therapy session between a father and psychiatrist, evoking the absurdity of Dadaist performance art while hinting at repressed family secrets and mental unraveling.[4] Co-written by producer Bob Ezrin, the song's stream-of-consciousness structure—replete with puns like "Da Da" as both artistic reference and paternal address—sets a tone of dark humor and psychological disorientation, drawing from Cooper's real-life haze of addiction without explicit resolution.[1] "Enough's Enough" addresses feelings of guilt and addiction through lyrics lamenting a mother's death and paternal neglect, symbolizing the protagonist Sonny's battle with substance abuse and emotional inheritance.[17] This track, co-authored by Cooper, guitarist Dick Wagner, and Ezrin, uses terse, accusatory verses to explore personal culpability in familial breakdown, blending dark humor with raw confession to underscore the album's motif of inescapable madness. "Former Lee Warmer" presents a surreal narrative of identity crisis, depicting a hidden brother locked in an attic as a metaphor for suppressed alter egos or the "former" self discarded amid career and personal collapse—explicitly referencing Cooper's impending departure from Warner Bros. Records, with the character's name a pun on "former Lee Warner."[15] Written by Cooper, Wagner, and Ezrin, the song's lyrics evoke isolation and delusion through imagery of "mops and brooms" as companions, avoiding traditional horror in favor of psychological entrapment, and tying into recurring themes of split personalities and hidden trauma.[18] For satirizing conformity, "No Man's Land" (potentially misattributed in some analyses to similar-titled works) critiques societal pressures through its portrayal of existential limbo, where the narrator searches for an authentic self amid "no man's land" of inauthenticity, using stream-of-consciousness pleas like "I'm looking for the real me" to mock rigid identities. Similarly, "I Love America" employs ironic patriotism and puns on consumerism to lampoon cultural homogeneity, with lines celebrating excess while exposing underlying insanity, co-written by Cooper and Ezrin to highlight escapism as a false refuge from madness.[2] Overall, the lyrics exhibit a stream-of-consciousness style characterized by puns, non-sequiturs, and dark humor, largely co-written by Cooper, Ezrin, and Wagner, which creates a non-linear structure without a conventional concept album arc—recurring motifs of insanity, fractured families, and futile escapism weave through tracks like "Dyslexia" (exploring perceptual distortion) and "Fresh Blood" (vampiric urges as addiction allegory), forming a cohesive yet ambiguous portrait of mental descent inspired partly by Cooper's dream-like states during his struggles.[5] This approach marks a shift from prior horror-centric works, prioritizing introspective surrealism over shock value.[15]Artwork and release
Cover art and packaging
The cover art for Alice Cooper's DaDa draws direct inspiration from Salvador Dalí's 1940 oil painting Slave Market with the Disappearing Bust of Voltaire, adapting the surrealist's use of optical illusions where the profiles of two women and surrounding elements form the bust of the philosopher Voltaire, to mirror the album's embrace of dadaist absurdity and visual distortion.[1] This choice ties into the album's conceptual framework, evoking the chaotic, anti-establishment ethos of the Dada art movement through fragmented and illusory imagery that challenges perception and identity.[15] The design was handled by artist Glen McKenzie, whose work for the front cover aligned with producer Bob Ezrin's vision for a surreal aesthetic that complemented the record's thematic disarray.[9] In 2015, DaDa was reissued as part of the 15-CD box set The Studio Albums 1969-1983, which preserved the original cover art in reproduced card sleeves while incorporating updated liner notes offering historical context on the album's production and themes.[19]Commercial release and promotion
DaDa was released in the United States on September 28, 1983, by Warner Bros. Records.[1] In the United Kingdom, the album followed on November 4, 1983, also via Warner Bros.[20] Promotion for the album was notably restrained, primarily due to Alice Cooper's ongoing battle with alcoholism, which left him unable to undertake a full tour.[15] Warner Bros. provided minimal support, resulting in limited marketing efforts overall.[5] The track "I Love America" was issued as a single exclusively in the UK, marking the album's primary promotional push in that market.[21] Commercially, DaDa achieved modest success, peaking at number 93 on the UK Albums Chart and spending just one week in the listing after entering on November 12, 1983.[22] The album failed to enter the US Billboard 200.[21] Originally available in vinyl LP and cassette formats, DaDa saw CD reissues in the 1990s, including a 1990 Japanese edition and a 1999 European version.[9] A limited edition orange swirl vinyl reissue was released in 2018 by Rhino Records.[23] It was later featured in the 2015 box set The Studio Albums 1969–1983, a 15-disc collection with remastered tracks and bonus content.[19]Reception and legacy
Initial critical response
Upon its release in September 1983, DaDa elicited a mixed critical response, with reviewers appreciating its bold experimentation and thematic variety while critiquing elements of overproduction and uneven execution in Alice Cooper's vocal delivery.[5] In Kerrang!, critic Neil Jeffries lauded the album's "tongue-in-cheek sick sense of humour" and quirky, mature AOR style, emphasizing its madcap energy in tracks like "Enough's Enough" and "Former Lee Warmer," where Cooper explores dysfunctional family dynamics with twisted wit; he suggested the record marked a graceful evolution for the artist, potentially rivaling his earlier classics despite a shift away from punchy rock anthems.[24] A retrospective aggregate score from AllMusic, penned by Gary Hill, awarded DaDa 3.5 out of 5 stars, positioning it as far above average within Cooper's catalog for its conceptual depth and sonic innovation, though no Metacritic score exists due to the pre-digital era.[2] Contemporary retrospectives from 2023 have addressed historical gaps in coverage by framing DaDa as an underrated work, with Distorted Sound highlighting its authenticity as a metaphor-laden reflection of Cooper's personal struggles during a turbulent period.[5]Long-term impact and reappraisal
Over the decades, DaDa has been recognized as a pivotal transitional album in Alice Cooper's career, marking the end of his "blackout" period amid severe substance abuse issues that preceded his sobriety in 1983.[15] Produced during a time when Cooper later admitted to having no recollection of the recording process due to his addictions, the album served as a chaotic culmination of his experimental phase before his return to hard rock with Constrictor.[15] This context has positioned DaDa as a raw, unfiltered artifact of personal turmoil, influencing perceptions of it as a bridge between Cooper's theatrical shock rock roots and his later, more stable output. In the 2010s and beyond, DaDa underwent significant reappraisal, emerging as a cult favorite among dedicated fans for its unpolished authenticity and bold artistic risks. Critics and enthusiasts have praised its willingness to embrace surrealism and vulnerability, with a 2023 retrospective describing it as an "honest and authentic representation" of Cooper's mindset in 1983, reckoning with his demons through metaphor and dark humor.[5] By the early 2020s, it had solidified its status as a misunderstood masterpiece, appreciated for defying commercial expectations in an era dominated by MTV-friendly pop metal.[25] Discussions in 2025, amid Cooper's reunion with his original bandmates for a new classic rock album, though no direct musical ties were drawn in promotional materials.[26] The album's legacy extends to its influence on subsequent artists, particularly in experimental and shock rock genres. Italian dark/shock rock band The Mugshots, formed in 2001, was inspired by Alice Cooper's DaDa album following frontman Mickey E. Vil's exposure to the record during a U.S. visit, crediting it as a core inspiration for their sound blending Alice Cooper's theatrics with punk and goth elements.[27] More broadly, DaDa's fusion of synthesizer-driven new wave, hard rock riffs, and loose concept narrative—exploring themes of fractured identity and familial dysfunction—has impacted synth-rock acts and modern concept albums by emphasizing narrative ambiguity over straightforward horror tropes.[5][11] Within Cooper's discography, DaDa endures as a "lost classic," often overlooked in mainstream retrospectives but revered by connoisseurs for its sonic daring and prescience. Its heavy reliance on the Fairlight CMI sampler for atmospheric textures foreshadowed digital production trends in rock, while tracks like "Former Lee Warmer" exemplify a stream-of-consciousness style that prefigured indie and alternative explorations of mental fragmentation.[13] Despite limited commercial sampling in indie music—such as unverified nods in goth tracks—the album's reissues and fan-driven advocacy have cemented its role as an essential, if eccentric, chapter in Cooper's evolution.[16]Credits and performance
Track listing
DaDa features nine tracks divided across two sides of the original vinyl release. The songwriting credits vary by track, primarily involving Alice Cooper, Bob Ezrin, Dick Wagner, and Graham Shaw.| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | DaDa | Ezrin | 4:45 |
| 2 | Enough's Enough | Cooper, Ezrin, Wagner, Shaw | 4:19 |
| 3 | Former Lee Warmer | Cooper, Ezrin, Wagner | 4:07 |
| 4 | No Man's Land | Cooper, Ezrin, Wagner, Shaw | 3:51 |
| 5 | Dyslexia | Cooper, Ezrin, Wagner, Shaw | 4:25 |
| 6 | Scarlet and Sheba | Cooper, Ezrin, Wagner | 5:19 |
| 7 | I Love America | Cooper, Ezrin, Wagner, Shaw | 3:47 |
| 8 | Fresh Blood | Cooper, Ezrin, Wagner | 6:53 |
| 9 | Pass the Gun Around | Cooper, Wagner | 5:43 |