Now You See Inside is the debut studio album by American rock band SR-71 , with "Right Now " being its lone radio hit single. The title comes from a line in the bridge of "What a Mess". In December 2000, SR-71 toured the US east coast with American Hi-Fi .[ 5]
Title Writer(s) 1. "Politically Correct " Mitch Allan 3:19 2. "Right Now " 2:47 3. "What a Mess" Allan Mark Beauchemin Jeff Reid 3:42 4. "Last Man on the Moon" (listed on some copies as "Last Moon on Monday") 3:47 5. "Empty Spaces" 4:28 6. "Another Night Alone" 3:33 7. "Alive" 4:12 8. "Fame (What She's Wanting)" 2:46 9. "Go Away" Allan 4:20 10. "Non-Toxic" Allan 4:04 11. "Paul McCartney" 5:25
Japanese bonus tracks Title Writer(s) 12. "Right Now" (acoustic) 2:58 13. "Last Excuse" (demo version) Allan 4:18 14. "Right Now" (Enhanced video) 3:10
Year
Chart
Position
2000
Billboard 200
81
Billboard Heatseekers Chart
2
Single
Year
Single
Chart
Position
2000
"Right Now"
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks
2
Billboard Hot 100
102
Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks
38
Billboard Hot 100 Airplay
81
"Politically Correct"
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks
22
Mitch Allan – vocals, rhythm guitar
Dan Garvin – drums, percussion, backing vocals
Jeff Reid – bass, keyboards, backing vocals
Mark Beauchemin – lead guitar, keyboards, backing vocals
Additional personnel
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John Allen – backing vocals
Kevin Kadish – backing vocals
John Shanks – guitars
Gil Norton – keyboards
Mark Pythian – keyboards
Patrick Warren – keyboards
Rob Ladd – percussion
Richard George – violin
Chris Tombling – violin
Audrey Riley – cello
Richard Bissell – French horn
Engineered by: Graham Dominy, Brandon Mason, Bradley Cook
Mixing by: Jack Joseph, Neal Avron
Second Engineer: Richard Ash
Mastering by: Ted Jensen
^ link
^ Huisseune, Rick. "SR-71 - Now You See Inside" . Melodic . Retrieved July 18, 2017 .
^ Salmutter, Elmar (June–August 2001). "Reviews: SR-71 / Now You See Inside CD" . Ox-Fanzine (in German). Retrieved May 27, 2019 .
^ a b link
^ "American Hi-Fi" . American Hi-Fi. Archived from the original on February 21, 2001. Retrieved October 24, 2020 .
^ a b "SR-71 not worth price of admission" . The Lantern . January 25, 2001. Retrieved September 16, 2001 .
^ Marshall, Bob (July 1, 2015). "41 Pop-Punk Albums All 2000s Kids Loved" . BuzzFeed .