Bachelor No. 2 or, the Last Remains of the Dodo is the third studio album by the American singer-songwriter Aimee Mann, released on May 2, 2000. Some songs were previously released on the soundtrack for the 1999 film Magnolia, which Mann wrote in the same period. She co-wrote "The Fall of the World's Own Optimist" with Elvis Costello.

Mann took more control over the production than on her previous albums. Many of the songs were inspired by her frustration with her record label, Geffen Records. Mann's previous albums had not been successful, and Geffen refused to release Bachelor No. 2, feeling it contained no hit singles. In response, Mann set up her own label, SuperEgo, and released it herself. Bachelor No. 2 sold 270,000 copies, a large number for an independent artist.

According to Metacritic, Bachelor No. 2 is the 28th best-reviewed album and the ninth best-reviewed indie or alternative album of the decade, and Slant Magazine named it the decade's 100th-best album. The success established Mann as a career artist who could work outside of the major label system.

Writing

Aimee Mann's first two solo albums, Whatever (1993) and I'm With Stupid (1995), achieved strong reviews but did not meet sales expectations. After success in the 1980s with her band 'Til Tuesday, Mann began to be seen as someone whose career was in decline. Later in the 1990s, Mann became a regular act at Largo, a Los Angeles nightclub where her collaborator Jon Brion hosted performances from alternative songwriters including Elliott Smith, Fiona Apple and Rufus Wainwright. This shaped Mann's songwriting; Largo fit her so well that the owner jokingly nicknamed it "Aimee Mann's clubhouse".

Mann contributed songs to the soundtrack of the 1999 film Magnolia, including four songs later included on Bachelor No. 2. One executive suggested she work with Diane Warren, who had written hit singles for major acts. Mann wrote "Nothing Is Good Enough" in response to the criticism, but felt the song could also apply to many kinds of relationship. According to Mann, "I sent him a tape of a song that I couldn't finish and he added a new bit. Basically I had a problem with a song and he fixed it — it was as simple as that." According to Mann, the Geffen boss, Jimmy Iovine, said: "Aimee doesn't expect us to put this record out as it is, does she?"

In 1998, the Sony Music employee Gail Marowitz predicted that Mann would make more money selling 70,000 albums independently than by selling 300,000 on a major label. With Mann's husband, the songwriter Michael Penn, they also established United Musicians, a collective working outside the major label system. Using the money earned through royalties from Magnolia, Mann bought the Bachelor No. 2 masters from Geffen. As of May 2008, Bachelor No. 2 had sold more than 230,000 copies in the US. In 2020, Mann released a 20th-anniversary reissue for Record Store Day, with an alternative track list and five bonus tracks, including songs included on the Magnolia soundtrack. Mann said she remained pleased with the album and did not regret leaving Geffen.

Reception

On the review aggregator website Metacritic, Bachelor No. 2 has a score of 89 out of 100 based on 13 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".

Writing for the New Yorker in 2000, Nick Hornby wrote that Bachelor No. 2 was Mann's strongest work to date, praising her "bleak and bracing cynicism about our ability to connect with fellow humans" and her "sinuous, Burt Bacharach-like melodies". Slant Magazine named the album the 100th-best of the decade.

Reviewing the album in 2019, Pitchfork called it a "contemporary classic" with "the organic flow of a late-night set in a small, hushed room ... Though they're by no means minimalistic, these arrangements establish a sense of intimacy that's hard to find on full-band rock records that aren't deliberately, performatively lo-fi."

| title2 = Nothing Is Good Enough

| writer2 = Mann

| extra2 =

| length2 = 3:10

| title3 = Red Vines

| writer3 = Mann

| extra3 = Mann

| length3 = 3:44

| title7 = Ghost World

| writer7 = Mann

| extra7 = Mike Dineen

| length7 = 3:30

| title8 = Calling It Quits

| writer8 = Mann

| extra8 = Judge

| length8 = 4:09