American Music Club - 1984-1995

1984-1995
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Album Details: 1984-1995

Release Date:01/01/2004
UPC:

Track List: 1984-1995

  1. Sick of Food
  2. If I Had a Hammer
  3. Nightwatchman
  4. Outside This Bar
  5. Hold on to Your Love
  6. L.A. Is My Woman
  7. Laughing Stock
  8. Chanel #5
  9. Firefly
  10. Challenger
  11. I Always Knew
  1. Away Down My Street
  2. Kathleen [Live]
  3. Sleeping Pills [Demo Version]
  4. Memo from Bernal Heights
  5. Western Sky
  6. Why Won't You Stay
  7. Last Harbor
  8. Love Conneciton NYC [Demo Version]
  9. I'm in Heaven Now
  10. Confidential Agent [Everclear Ro...

Pro Reviews: 1984-1995

  • All Music Guide

    When American Music Club set out on a reunion tour in early 2004, they had no new material ready for release, so they brought along a new piece of product in the form of 19841995, intended as a limitededition compilation of rare and unreleased AMC material. However, given that much of their most important material is currently out of print most notably 1991's Everclear, arguably the group's finest hour 19841995 plays more like the "Greatest Hits" album this group was never commercially successful enough to earn. While there are more than a few rare gems on board powerful lowfi demos for "I Always Knew" and "Sleeping Pills", a striking live take of "Away Down My Street", and "I'm In Heaven Now" from the long loutofprint Human Music compilation there are also plenty of cuts which should be quite familiar to anyone who followed AMC's career. But that's not to say that they aren't welcome in this context, or that they make this collection any less compelling. While Mark Eitzel's songs ...were always American Music Club's greatest treasure, 19851995 dramatically illustrates just how great a band AMC were, as they swing from the fragile textures of "Kathleen" and "Western Sky" to the noisy thunder of "Challenger" and create a superb backdrop for the various wounded hearts to be found these songs, frequently with greater finesse than Eitzel and his collaborators have managed on his quite worthy postAMC solo efforts. (And "Memo From Bernal Heights", written by guitarist Vudi, reveals that this group had more than one worthwhile songwriter on board.) 19841995 is available only at the band's live shows and through their website, which means that few outside the group's devoted fan base are likely to hear it, but while it's a lovely testament to the emotional power of this group's repertoire, it's also as fine an introduction to AMC's music as one could hope for, and with Everclear, California and United Kingdom currently unavailable, it's also the most accessible place to sample a number of remarkable songs from one of the finest and most distinctive bands of their time. For beginners or devotees, this is essential listening. - Mark Deming, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

American Music Club

Although chosen for its deliberately nondescript qualities, in retrospect the name American Music Club was the perfect moniker for the lauded San Francisco-based band led by singer/songwriter Mark Eitzel: over the course of seven acclaimed albums, the group tied together the disparate strands of the American musical fabric -- rock, folk, country, punk, even lounge schma... Read more