The Definitive Pop Collection [Remaster]Marshall Crenshaw
Release Date: 11/07/2006
Original Release:
2006
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 950616_CD
UPC # 081227411220
Label: Rhino Records (USA)
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
| Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping |
|
Disc: 1
Disc: 2
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Marshall Crenshaw
Producer: David Kershenbaum; Don Dixon; Ed Stasium; Garry Tallent; Alan Betrock; Larry Hirsch; Marshall Crenshaw; Mitch Easter; Paul McKenna; Richard Gottehrer; Steve Lillywhite; T-Bone Burnett; Steve Woolard (Compilation) Distributor: WEA (Distributor) Notes: Audio Remasterers: Dave Schultz; Dan Hersch; Bill Inglot. Photographers: Janet Macoska; Stephanie Chernikowski; Gary Gershoff. Once you've made the perfect pop album, it's hard to say what to do for an encore, and this is the dilemma that's dogged Marshall Crenshaw's career, at least from a commercial standpoint. Crenshaw's self-titled debut album, released in 1982, was a grand-slam collection of 12 superb songs, delivered with fresh-faced passion and sincerity and performed with smarts and concision; it was the sort of instant masterpiece so good that almost anything that followed would be seen as a disappointment, and when Crenshaw's second album, Field Day, reached stores a year later, most fans and critics focused on Steve Lillywhite's cluttered, boomy production and ignored the fact that Crenshaw's songwriting had, if anything, improved in the 12 months that separated the two albums. Crenshaw's career never quite recovered from the backlash over Field Day, and as a result, plenty of fans of the first album ignored the records which followed; each one a solid piece of pop craftsmanship with great songs and performances dozens of more popular acts would have envied. Anyone who doubts the consistent strength of Marshall Crenshaw's body of work need only to pick up The Definitive Pop Collection to find out what they've been missing. Featuring tracks from each of Crenshaw's studio albums, as well as a couple of rare single sides and his cover of Buddy Holly's "Crying, Waiting, Hoping" from the La Bamba soundtrack, The Definitive Pop Collection pretty much lives up to its title, and while Crenshaw's lyrical concerns take a turn towards greater maturity over the course of these two discs and the sonic palate broadens a bit, Crenshaw's instincts remain dead-on throughout -- he writes songs that are melodic, hooky and emotionally true, and he sings and plays them with an honesty and force that still find room for humor without venom. If there's a criticism to be made of this set, it's that it features all of the 22 songs that appear on Rhino's 2000 collection The Best of Marshall Crenshaw: This Is Easy, which accomplishes the same task in more concise form. But the eight additional tracks present here are certainly welcome, and Bill Holdship's liner notes offer a fitting appreciation of an underappreciated artist. Anyone who loves great pop music will love this. ~ Mark Deming
It is entirely fitting that Marshall Crenshaw made his first big splash playing John Lennon in BEATLEMANIA. Although the affable singer-songwriter resembles Buddy Holly more than Lennon, his music harks back to the glory years of rock & roll, when all that rock required was good hooks and a beat you could dance to. His debut record in 1982 teemed with great melodies and simple-yet-sharp lyrics, and spawned "Someday Someway," a big hit for Robert Gordon. Since then, Crenshaw has seen his songs covered by a wide range of artists, from the Nitty Gritty Dirt band to Bette Midler, and he has continued to make high-quality records on his own terms.
Also Appears On:
DVDs:
Similar Artist:
20/20 Badfinger Barone, Richard Bell, Chris (Guitar/Big Star) Big Star BoDeans (The) Bourgeois Tagg Burnett, T-Bone Cheap Trick Chilton, Alex Costello, Elvis Crenshaw, Robert Crowded House D.B. Cooper Dixon, Don Foster & Lloyd Game Theory Gin Blossoms Gordon, Robert Heyman, Richard X. Jamie Rounds Jones, Marti Keene, Tommy Lloyd, BIll Lowe, Nick MacColl, Kirsty Penn, Michael Plimsouls (The) Posies (The) Ragsdale, David Byron Raspberries (The) Records (The) Rubinoos (The) Searchers (The) Semisonic Shoes Smithereens (The) Stamey, Chris Straw, Syd Sweet, Matthew The Flamin' Groovies Twilley, Dwight Vaughn, Ben Willis, Kelly dB's (The)
Influences:
Beach Boys (The) Beatles (The) Berry, Chuck Big Star Byrds (The) Diddley, Bo Eddy, Duane Fuller, Bobby Green, Al (Vocals) Holly, Buddy Knox, Buddy Presley, Elvis Searchers (The) Valens, Ritchie Vincent, Gene
Similar Genres:
New Wave |