Wire Train
Wire Train

MCA    MCAD-6427  (1990)

Rock/Pop
CD, 11   Tracks, 53:13  Length
01 Spin Wire Train 04:18
02 Should She Cry? Wire Train 04:32
03 She Wire Train 04:11
04 If You See Her Go Wire Train 05:50
05 Dakota Wire Train 04:52
06 Moonlight Dream Wire Train 05:06
07 Simply Racing Wire Train 03:33
08 Precious Time Wire Train 02:52
09 Oh Me Oh My Wire Train 04:33
10 Tin Jesus Wire Train 09:10
11 All Night Living Wire Train 04:16
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Jeffrey Trott
Drums Brian MacLeod
Bass Anders Rundblad
Vocals Kevin Hunter
Musician Wire Train
Producer David Tickle; Don Smith
Engineer Bob Salcedo; Gina Immel
Personal Details
Index # 3847
Owner Dave
Tags Alternative Rock
User Defined
Purchased Used
Notes
Wire Train's fourth album, their first after leaving 415 Records, doesn't have anything as immediately grabbing as "Chamber of Hellos" or "Skills of Summer," but it's both a much better album than its dismissive reviews at the time suggested and a tremendous improvement over 1987's limp, overproduced Ten Women. David Tickle's production is very simple, emphasizing the guitar interplay of Kevin Hunter and Jeffrey Trott, with subtle and effective bits of mandolin, fiddle, and pedal steel coloring songs like the lovely, folky "She" and a plaintive homage to Neil Young (circa Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere) called "If You See Her Go." Hunter's songwriting has regained its melodicism, even if the lyrics tend towards obtuseness (that is, even more than before). There are still a couple missteps, foremost among them being the absolutely atrocious "Oh Me Oh My," the worst Bob Dylan parody since Simon & Garfunkel's "A Simple Desultory Philippic" (or Knocked Out Loaded). Overall, though, Wire Train would have been a nice way for the band to go out, had they not followed it with the career low point No Soul No Strain. -- Stewart Mason (allmusic.com)