Jerry Harrison
Jerry Harrison: Casual Gods
Sire
9 23663-2
(1988)
Rock/Pop
CD, 12
Tracks, 55:29
Length
|
|
|
01 |
Rev It Up |
Jerry Harrison; John Sieger; Ernie Brooks |
|
|
04:11 |
02 |
Song Of Angels |
Jerry Harrison |
|
|
03:37 |
03 |
Man With A Gun |
Jerry Harrison |
|
|
04:40 |
04 |
Let It Come Down |
Jerry Harrison |
|
|
04:54 |
05 |
Cherokee Chief |
Jerry Harrison; Ernie Brooks |
|
|
04:44 |
06 |
A Perfect Lie |
Jerry Harrison; Arthur Russell; Ernie Brooks |
|
|
04:30 |
07 |
Are You Running? |
Jerry Harrison; Ernie Brooks; Monique Dayan |
|
|
03:55 |
08 |
Breakdown In The Passing Lane |
Jerry Harrison |
|
|
04:36 |
09 |
A.K.A. Love |
Jerry Harrison; Ernie Brooks |
|
|
04:24 |
10 |
We're Always Talking |
Jerry Harrison |
|
|
04:55 |
11 |
Bobby |
Jerry Harrison |
|
|
04:05 |
12 |
Bobby (extended mix) |
Jerry Harrison |
|
|
06:58 |
|
Packaging |
Jewel Case |
Spars |
DDD |
Sound |
Stereo |
|
Keyboards |
Jerry Harrison |
Organ |
Bernie Worrell |
Guitar |
Alex Weir |
Guitar |
Chris Spedding |
Guitar |
Robbie McIntosh |
Drums |
Rick Jaeger |
Drums |
Yogi Horton |
Percussion |
David Van Tieghem |
Horn |
Dickie Landry |
Musician |
Harrison, Jerry (Jerry Harrison: Casual Gods) |
Producer |
Jerry Harrison; Ernie Brooks |
Engineer |
David Vartanian |
|
Index |
#
1463 |
Owner |
Dave |
Tags |
Pop Rock, Synth Pop |
|
|
With Talking Heads having split, guitarist Jerry Harrison released his second solo effort with 1988's Casual Gods. In addition to playing guitar, keyboards, and singing, Harrison also produced the album, which featured players like Bernie Worrel on keyboards and Chris Spedding and Robbie McIntosh playing guitar. Harrison's vocals have a quality similar to David Byrne, and the music is reminiscent of Fear of Music-era Talking Heads. "Rev It Up" was an AOR hit and deservedly so. The song lives up to its name with a funky, loose groove, snaky guitar, and throbbing bass. "Man with a Gun" is just one of many tracks featuring great lyrics on Casual Gods, with a series of wry observations ("A pretty girl can walk anywhere/All doors open for her") over a moody rhythm punctuated by guitar twitches. Casual Gods is a pleasure for Talking Heads fans, but it manages to stand on its own. -- Tom Demalon (allmusic.com)