Details

Track Listing 1. (Soundbite) 2. What Do You Dream of? 3. Who Stole That Train 4. Laughter 5. Twenty-Five Forty-One 6. Starless Summer Sky 7. Only an Hour Ago 8. Wondrous Place, A 9. "In" Crowd, The 10. Theme From "Flaregun" 11. Seven Miles an Hour 12. There and Back Again
Album Notes Personnel: Marshall Crenshaw (vocals, various instruments); Jay Sdad (acoustic, electric, slide & lap steel guitars); Bill Lloyd (acoustic, 6-string & 12-string electric guitars, mandolin); Andy York (electric & baritone guitars, E-bow, background vocals); Greg Leisz (dobro); Chris Carmichael (violin, cello); Brad Jones (fake cello, electric bass, background vocals); Crispin Cioe (saxophone); Larry Etkin (trumpet); Kenny Margolis (piano); Byron House (acoustic bass); Les James Lester (drums, bongos); Fenner Kastner (drums). Engineers: Brad Jones, Elijah Shaw, Will Schillinger. Principally recorded at Alex The Great, Nashville, Tennessee and Pilot Recording, New York, New York. MIRACLE OF SCIENCE was nominated for a 1997 Grammy Award for Best Recording Package. 1996's self-produced MIRACLE OF SCIENCE is Marshall Crenshaw's first studio offering since LIFE'S TOO SHORT (1991). While his days on the majors seem to be behind him (for the time being, anyway), MIRACLE is one of his strongest albums. Recorded primarily in Nashville, with some bits recorded here and there, and in various peoples' homes, the album is a bracing mix of original romantic pop ("What Do You Dream Of?," "There And Back Again," "Laughter") and instrumentals ("Theme From 'Flaregun'"). Crenshaw tosses in a few well-chosen covers for variety. Much can be learned about songwriters from their taste in other writer's material. Crenshaw's live album, MY TRUCK IS MY HOME, included an early-Beatle-esque take on The MC5's "Tonight." On MIRACLE, he discovers the line that links him with Grant Hart by covering the ex-Hnsker Dn-er's "Twenty-Five Forty-One." But Crenshaw kicks up dust as well as he polishes gems. Hy Heath's "Who Stole That Train" finds Crenshaw and his cohorts digging a fine and deep groove.
Industry Reviews 3 Stars (out of 5) - ...mixes his trademark Beatlesque pop with anthemic soul and barnstorming R&B covers....originals like `Starless Summer Sky,' `Only An Hour Ago' and `What Do You Dream Of?' offer further proof, if more were needed, that Crenshaw is one of the supreme melodists of rock's last 15 years... Rolling Stone (09/19/1996)
...his most assured and consistently enjoyable outing since 1985's DOWNTOWN....melodious songwriting, dry wit, shrewd choice of covers...and resourceful vocal style that transcends his reedy timbre...are in evidence, along with a new twist: terrific guitar playing... Musician (11/01/1996)
3 Stars - (out of 5) - ...a hearteningly spry effort. Although he confesses to fantasies about walking across the faces of former A&R men in golf spikes, his music retains the confident bounce of those early Warners albums... Q (11/01/1996)
...With just enough acid mixed in with the sweetness, SCIENCE is truly a miracle. - Rating: A- Entertainment Weekly (08/09/1996)
3 Stars - (out of 5) - ...a hearteningly spry effort. Although he confesses to fantasies about walking across the faces of former A&R men in golf spikes, his music retains the confident bounce of those early Warners albums... Q (11/01/1996)
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