Shopping > Music > Prefab Sprout > Gunman and Other Stories

Prefab Sprout - Gunman and Other Stories

Gunman and Other Stories
Pricing Not Available
Not Yet Rated 0 Ratings (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Gunman and Other Stories

Release Date:06/18/2001
UPC:

Track List: Gunman and Other Stories

  1. Cowboy Dreams
  2. Wild Card in the Pack
  3. I'm a Troubled Man
  4. Streets of Laredo/Not Long for T...
  5. Love Will Find Someone for You
  1. Cornfield Ablaze
  2. When You Get to Know Me Better
  3. Gunman
  4. Blue Roses
  5. Farmyard Cat

Pro Reviews: Gunman and Other Stories

  • All Music Guide

    After the sevenyear gap between 1990's Jordan: The Comeback and 1997's Andromeda Heights, many Prefab Sprout fans were surprised by the comparatively brief four years between that album and 2001's The Gunman and Other Stories. The album holds other surprises for the longtime Prefab Sprout fan; for one thing, backing vocalist Wendy Smith is absent, having left the group after the birth of her first child, and for another, it's a Westernthemed concept album. Actually, though, this last shouldn't be too surprising, as singer/songwriter Paddy McAloon has had a thing for the American West as far back as the 1984 single "Don't Sing," and has always shown a love of traditional country music, as on Prefab Sprout's 1985 cover of Jim Reeves' "He'll Have to Go." That said, this album owes more to Jim Webb than Jim Reeves. In the manner of Jordan: The Comeback, this album has a nearly symphonic feeling. Veteran producer Tony Visconti is a master of balancing orchestral parts with a rock rhythm sec...tion, and so The Gunman and Other Stories is considerably less airy than Andromeda Heights, which is not to say that it rocks out or anything. The lush arrangements and justso embellishments of strings and reeds recall the polite sterility of Visconti's '70s heyday, but as always, the melodic richness and evocative lyrics of McAloon's songs keep them from being boring, middleoftheroad pop. The glorious love song "Blue Roses" and the unapologetically silly "Farmyard Cat," a goofy square dance played by a full string section and bleeping electronic percussion with the dopiest lyrics of McAloon's career (yes, including the chorus of "The King of Rock and Roll"), are two particularly brilliant tracks.McAloon's leastpersonal record. For the immense skill evident in the nearly nineminute title track, a minioperetta that encapsulates all the themes of honor, romance, and retribution at the heart of the album, there's a kind of detachment to the lyrics, a feeling that McAloon is clearly writing in character, but not investing too much in the results. This is not the worst Prefab Sprout album that title will forever belong to 1988's tooslickbyhalf From Langley Park to Memphis but it pales in comparison to Paddy McAloon's best work. - Stewart Mason, All Music Guide Read more Less

Rate & Write a Review: Gunman and Other Stories

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Gunman and Other Stories

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Prefab Sprout

One of the most beloved British pop bands of the '80s and '90s, Prefab Sprout has had a minimum of chart success in the United States, where they're all but unknown outside of their devoted cult following, but singer/songwriter Paddy McAloon is regularly hailed as one of the great songwriters of his era. Critics regularly compare McAloon favorably to Elvis Costello, Pau... Read more