Major label debuts for any artist can be a double-edged sword. Recording a group of songs you've had years to craft means they've spent plenty of time in the woodshed, but the pressure to produce a hit, especially in the back half of the 90s, means sometimes the obvious singles get the most attention in the studio and post-production. That is the semi-issue with Tracy Bonham's 1996 freshman release The Burdens of Being Upright. Chock full of interesting, catchy tunes like the hit single "Mother Mother," the bouncy "The One," the punky "Bulldog," and others helps the record fly by in entertaining fashion. As high as the highs are, there are no low lows, just some disappointing valleys that sound like the first draft of what could have been much more.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Navy Bean
16:28 - Mother Mother
22:45 - Tell It To The Sky
32:29 - Sharks Can't Sleep
Outro - The One
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
#541: Soundgarden in the 80s
#540: Spilt Milk by Jellyfish
#539: Killjoy by Shihad
#538: Abort by Tribe
#537: Are You With Me? by Cowboy Mouth
#536: Lo-Fi in the 90s
#535: Rotting Piñata by Sponge
#534: Pushing the Salmanilla Envelope by Jimmie's Chicken Shack
#533: Bring On The Juice by Hoss
#532: Sophomore Slump Revisited - Congratulations, I'm Sorry by Gin Blossoms
#531: Mint 400 by Ammonia
#530: Friction, Baby by Better Than Ezra
#529: Eyewitness by Shades Apart
#528: Tokyo An*l Dynamite by The Gerogerigegege
#527: Cats and Dogs by Royal Trux
#526: Neil Young In The 90s
#525: Clutch by Clutch
#524: Rid Of Me by PJ Harvey
#523: Frizzle Fry by Primus
#522: Albums of 1991 Roundtable
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Derringer Discoveries - A Music Adventure Podcast
One Song
Bandsplain
Switched on Pop
Evolution of a Snake: The Taylor Swift Podcast