Chris Stamey - Fireworks (1991)
Artist: Chris Stamey
Title: Fireworks
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Pop Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:56:26
Total Size: 131 mb | 355 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Fireworks
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Pop Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:56:26
Total Size: 131 mb | 355 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Chris Stamey - The Company Of Light
02. Chris Stamey - Something Came Over Me
03. Chris Stamey - Glorious Delusion
04. Chris Stamey - Time Is Running Out
05. Chris Stamey - Two Places At Once
06. Chris Stamey - Perfect Time
07. Chris Stamey - The Newlyweds
08. Chris Stamey - On The Radio (For Ray Davies)
09. Chris Stamey - All The Heart's Desire / Black Orchids
10. Chris Stamey - Fireworks (Still Life #5)
11. Chris Stamey - The Brakeman's Consolation
12. Chris Stamey - I Want You
13. Chris Stamey - You Don't Miss Your Water
Chris Stamey's Fireworks wasn't released until 1991, but it was originally recorded in 1988 as Stamey's second solo album for A&M records, who rejected the resulting tapes as too weird and uncommercial. One wonders if anyone at A&M had ever actually heard any of Stamey's music (other than 1987's uncharacteristically straightforward It's Alright, his sole A&M release), since "weird and uncommercial" are the North Carolina-based rocker's calling cards. In fact, Fireworks is less extreme than earlier experiments like It's a Wonderful Life, but songs like the title track, an impressionistic soundscape of overdubbed guitars, are hardly Top 40 fare. Guests include ex-Sneakers bandmate Mitch Easter, Peter Buck, and NRBQ's Terry Adams, but this is definitely Stamey's show all the way. His idiosyncratic songwriting sense (the liner notes claim, not entirely helpfully, that the opaque "The Brakeman's Consolation" is an answer song to an old Cher single) and knack for sweetly memorable melodies battle it out throughout the album, giving Fireworks an odd but productive tension. It's Alright has the edge in terms of songwriting, but this is perhaps a more interesting album overall.