Shakespeare Alabama [Bonus Tracks] (1989)
by
Diesel Park West
One of the '80s most striking debuts, the first album from this Leicester, England quintet is filled with soaring guitar epics, complemented by the powerful vocals and provocative lyrics of frontman John Butler and expertly produced by Chris Kimsey. Heavily influenced by the same jangly folk-rock (Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, etc.) that helped fuel R.E.M. and other alternative darlings, Butler and his bandmates opted for clarity instead of navel-gazing, creating anthemic tunes like "All the Myths on Sunday" and "Bell of Hope ...
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One of the '80s most striking debuts, the first album from this Leicester, England quintet is filled with soaring guitar epics, complemented by the powerful vocals and provocative lyrics of frontman John Butler and expertly produced by Chris Kimsey. Heavily influenced by the same jangly folk-rock (Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, etc.) that helped fuel R.E.M. and other alternative darlings, Butler and his bandmates opted for clarity instead of navel-gazing, creating anthemic tunes like "All the Myths on Sunday" and "Bell of Hope," which sounded like instant classics and considered appropriately big topics like religion and history. But the band may have been, as its label claimed, "years ahead of its time" -- while Diesel Park West followed its debut 45 "When the Hoodoo Comes" with several more singles, including the rocking "Like Princes Do" and "Jackie's Still Sad," the group struggled to find an audience, and also failed to repeat the magic of Shakespeare Alabama, Rovi
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- Like Princes Do
- All the Myths on Sunday
- Bell of Hope
- Out of Nowhere
- The Waking Hour
- When the Hoodoo Comes
- Opportunity Crazy
- Jackie's Still Sad
- Here I Stand
- A House Divided
- Don't Be Scared of the Night
- What About Us!
- The Girl with the Name
- All the Myths on Sunday
- When the Hoodoo Comes
- Poison from the Inkwell
- Wanderlust
- Last Bus to Madison
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