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Michael Penn - Free-for-All (CD)

Free-for-All
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4.3 out of 5.0 stars 3 Ratings (2 Reviews)

Album Details: Free-for-All

Release Date:09/01/1992
Label:Rca
UPC:078636111322

Other Available Formats: Free-for-All

User Reviews: Free-for-All

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Rainy Day Music

    By brianhockeyp  Oct 31, 2003

    Pros: Pure listening magic !

    Cons: not one

    Free-for-All is what many would call the classic sophomore slump. Years had passed since Penn released the surprise hit March, and this gem never gained any airtime or bonafide hits. What a shame. All of Penn's albums; March, Free-for-All, the ex...cellent Resingned and MP4 had the same excellent sound, texture musically and feel. While I'll admit it is an acquired taste, Free-for-All is best listened to when one has time to kick back and relax and really soak in the music and meaning of each cut. Penn must have been going through some interesting stuff in his like when he penned these songs. Everything's Slipping My Mind is in my opinion the best, but each song really has its own flavor so it's hard to single one out but it it's the catchiest for my liking.If you want to turn folkie for a day play this. Then put it away for a couple months and listen to it again. You'll love it - but as mentioned , play it at the right time. It probably wouldn't go over well at a party. Like Penn ? - buy this - it's great. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    uneven but worth a listen

    By jayceerocker  Aug 29, 2000

    Michael Penns follow up to the catchy March album is uneven and lacks focus
    but is goo none the less, choice cuts, Long Way Down,Free Time,Coal

Pro Reviews: Free-for-All

  • All Music Guide

    FreeforAll (1992) is the album that proved to skeptics that Michael Penn was neither a onehit wonder nor an artistic lightweight trading on his famous surname. It's a darker, less immediately engaging album than March, but it's also a far more consistent album than that wildly uneven debut. From the ominous opener, "Long Way Down (Look What the Cat Drug In)," through to the seething closer, "Now We're Even," this is a murky but memorable set of tunes about deception, anger, broken promises, and recriminations. Hardly Frank Stallone territory. Penn and creative partner Patrick Warren (who, just as he did on March, contributes an atmospheric instrumental at the album's halfway point) fill the album with odd, unsettling sounds and trippy textures, but never at the expense of the songs. The creepy atmosphere and prominent production tricks on songs like the raging "Seen the Doctor" (the album's best song and an unfortunate flop as a single) actually enhance the dismissive, bitter lyrics an...d the nagging guitar hook. Wellreviewed but poorselling, FreeforAll marked the start of Michael Penn's unfortunate, long battle for a modicum of respect from his record company. It would be five years before he released another album. Stewart Mason, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Michael Penn

One of the most acclaimed singer/songwriters to emerge during the late 1980s, Michael Penn was seemingly destined for a career in show business. The oldest son of director Leo Penn and actress Eileen Ryan, he was born August 1, 1958 in New York City's Greenwich Village area; within a year, the family relocated to Los Angeles, and there Penn's younger siblings Sean (late... Read more