Bush Razorblade Suitcase review
Album details

Album Details

Release date: November 19th, 1996
Label: Interscope Records
Producer: Steve Albini

Musicians:

  • Gavin Rossdale (vocals, rhythm guitar)
  • Nigel Pulsford (lead guitar)
  • Dave Parsons (bass)
  • Robin Goodridge (drums)

Singles:

  • Swallowed
  • Greedy Fly
  • Bonedriven
  • Cold Contagious

Chart performance:

  • #1 US Billboard 200
  • #2 UK Album Chart
  • #1 UK Rock And Metal Album Chart

Total sales: 3,600,000
Certification: 3x Platinum
Score: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Bush – Razorblade Suitcase (1996) Review

1996 put Bush in a strange position.

Sixteen Stone had turned them into international stars, but it had also left them taking a sustained beating from the music press, particularly in Britain, where the old “manufactured Nirvana clones” line had hardened into lazy consensus.

So, instead of doubling down on the broad, radio-ready strengths that made the debut such a commercial force, Bush did something riskier: they chased credibility.

It’s a fascinating decision, and one that produces a mixed bag of results.

Bush Swallowed review

The Albini Gambit

On paper, hiring Steve Albini to produce this record made perfect sense.

He brought underground cachet, a minimalist production style, and a reputation that nobody could accuse of pandering.

But the trouble was obvious too: he had only recently produced In Utero, so the move that was meant to separate Bush from the Nirvana comparisons also risked dragging even more comparisons their way.

That tension runs through the entire album. Razorblade Suitcase is considerably heavier and less polished than Sixteen Stone, which proves Bush did have more muscle than some critics wanted to admit. But it also strips away much of the studio heft that made the debut’s best songs feel so immediate.

The result is a record that often sounds tougher, but not always better.

Steve Albini - Bush - Razorblade Suitcase
Bush Razorblade Suitcase

When It Works

At its best, the Albini partnership gives Bush exactly what they wanted.

Lead single Swallowed is the clearest example.

The track’s arrangement is sparse by Bush standards, the mood is bruised and distant, and Gavin Rossdale’s vocal is given just enough room to sound genuinely isolated from the noise occurring around him.

This smart production mirrors the track’s lyrical tone, which discusses Rossdale’s mental health struggles at being catapulted to overnight stardom, and it went on to become Razorblade Suitcase’s defining song — spending seven weeks at No. 1 on Billboard’s Modern Rock Tracks.

Elsewhere, the slow-burning Cold Contagious has a genuinely chilling guitar groove, and the devastatingly effective final third of Insect Kin shows how impactful the band can be when they let the tension build rather than chasing an obvious release.

Bush Cold Contagious

When It Doesn’t

The problem is that Bush don’t always sound comfortable inside this rougher frame.

Some songs feel like they’ve been stripped back past the point of usefulness.

The likes of Bonedriven and Straight No Chaser clearly have the frame of stronger tracks buried in them, but the raw production stops them from ever really bursting into life.

Elsewhere, the album starts self-sabotaging — Mouth wastes a strong chorus on a weak verse. A Tendency to Start Fires does the opposite. Distant Voices has plenty of Rossdale’s clever wordplay on show, but not enough song around it to make the words matter.

That’s the real frustration of Razorblade Suitcase — it isn’t short on ideas, it’s short on conversion.

Bush Razorblade Suitcase 1996

The Cost of Chasing Respect

Gavin Rossdale’s quest to prove his doubters wrong often pulls him in directions he doesn’t need to go.

On Sixteen Stone he showed clear promise for writing huge, radio-friendly choruses, but here he seems reluctant to use those instincts — almost as if giving people another obvious hook would somehow prove the critics right.

You’ll notice this in the record’s smaller details, such as the way he forces his Fender Jazzmaster into a state of overly distorted feedback throughout delicately arranged compositions, and inserts downtuned violin riffs (yes, seriously) in places they have absolutely no business being.

Rossdale’s internal tug-of-war gives Razorblade Suitcase its odd shape — and at times it’s fascinating to hear him deny his gift, but the record inevitably suffers for it.

bush razorblade suitcase in-depth album review

Success Didn’t Settle The Argument

Commercially, this gamble still worked well enough.

The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, selling 293,000 copies in its first week, and it remains Bush’s only US chart-topper.

It even fared well in the UK, reaching No. 4 on the albums chart.

But the bigger point is that success didn’t settle anything. If anything, it hardened the criticism. Bush still weren’t “accepted” in the way they seemed to want to be, and Razorblade Suitcase ended up documenting that tension in real time: a band trying to sound more “real”, while sacrificing some of the directness that made them matter in the first place.

Album Review Bush Razorblade Suitcase 1996

Bush – Razorblade Suitcase

Razorblade Suitcase is an album of great moments rather than great songs.

At its best it’s moody, abrasive, and gripping in a way that Sixteen Stone rarely tried to be. But at its worst it feels like a band second-guessing their own strengths in pursuit of approval that didn’t really matter anyway.

It manages to retain its incredibly raw sound even three decades later, and serves as a useful snapshot in time of a rock band desperately searching for their true identity, before finally locking it in on their standout third album.

These Go To Eleven Reworked Tracklist

>> Razorblade Suitcase (1996) is part of our Bush series.

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7 responses to “Bush – Razorblade Suitcase (1996) Review”

  1. […] a Nirvana rip-off.That all changed on The Science Of Things.The follow-up to 1996’s harsh Razorblade Suitcase, it features the hit single The Chemicals Between Us, which spent five weeks at #1 on the Billboard […]

  2. […] heftier production on show here addresses the main issue most fans had with Bush’s ultra-raw second album. You could also make a case that this brief experimentation with electronic music may have carried […]

  3. […] as a track which wouldn’t sound out of place on 1996’s Razorblade Suitcase, opener Solutions launches into a loud-as-fuck guitar drop straight out of The Science Of Things, […]

  4. […] As soon as opener Warm Machine explodes out of the gate, it’s clear that Bush are more confident in the fuller, thicker production of this album versus 1996’s harsh Razorblade Suitcase. […]

  5. […] with their debut, and then tried (and failed) to win over critics with it’s much harsher follow-up, Bush have arrived at a stage in their career where they don’t care whether you like them or […]

  6. […] Stone made them stars but left them buried under Nirvana comparisons. Razorblade Suitcase tried to answer the critics with rawness and Steve Albini, only to prove that “credibility” was […]

  7. […] followed Razorblade Suitcase with a strange […]

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