Kevin Salem - Glimmer (1996)
BAND/ARTIST: Kevin Salem
- Title: Glimmer
- Year Of Release: 1996
- Label: Roadrunner Records
- Genre: Alt Rock, Americana, Singer-Songwriter
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
- Total Time: 56:00
- Total Size: 137/426 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Run Run Run
02. Innocence
03. Pray for Rain
04. Chemical Night Train
05. Underneath
06. Sleep
07. Number Seven
08. All on Trial
09. Always
10. Damned
11. Trouble
12. Destructible
01. Run Run Run
02. Innocence
03. Pray for Rain
04. Chemical Night Train
05. Underneath
06. Sleep
07. Number Seven
08. All on Trial
09. Always
10. Damned
11. Trouble
12. Destructible
Glimmer is an album by the American alternative rock musician Kevin Salem, released in 1996.
The Washington City Paper thought that "the scrupulously tailored verse-chorus cadence of Glimmer's anthems feels so immediately familiar that Salem could probably make a mint ghost-writing for Tom Petty." The Austin Chronicle stated that "Glimmer is loaded with big guitars—chunky, Seventies-style arena-rock rhythms (think Joe Perry sans high-dollar production) with indie tones and guitar-noodling solos." The Tampa Tribune wrote: "Tom Petty with indie credibility for those hipsters who are too embarrassed to admit that Damn the Torpedoes rocks."
Stewart Lee, of The Sunday Times, declared that "beautiful, compelling, nerve-shattering lead-guitar lines snake and spiral over clean and uncluttered rhythm parts, never resorting to simple effects-pedal overload"; Lee later listed Glimmer as the best album of 1996. The St. Paul Pioneer Press thought that "Salem's tough/tender tunes, guitar wizardry and no-frills, all-thrills band just might set you on an endless road trip." The Boston Herald deemed it "a screamer of an album that works the intersection of heartland rock 'n' roll and guitar-driven alternative rock."
AllMusic wrote that Salem's "serious but not humorless lyrics have an almost novelistic detail to them, especially on the haunting 'Chemical Night Train', and the band ... rocks throughout." The Press-Telegram considered Glimmer to be the fifth best album of 1996.
The Washington City Paper thought that "the scrupulously tailored verse-chorus cadence of Glimmer's anthems feels so immediately familiar that Salem could probably make a mint ghost-writing for Tom Petty." The Austin Chronicle stated that "Glimmer is loaded with big guitars—chunky, Seventies-style arena-rock rhythms (think Joe Perry sans high-dollar production) with indie tones and guitar-noodling solos." The Tampa Tribune wrote: "Tom Petty with indie credibility for those hipsters who are too embarrassed to admit that Damn the Torpedoes rocks."
Stewart Lee, of The Sunday Times, declared that "beautiful, compelling, nerve-shattering lead-guitar lines snake and spiral over clean and uncluttered rhythm parts, never resorting to simple effects-pedal overload"; Lee later listed Glimmer as the best album of 1996. The St. Paul Pioneer Press thought that "Salem's tough/tender tunes, guitar wizardry and no-frills, all-thrills band just might set you on an endless road trip." The Boston Herald deemed it "a screamer of an album that works the intersection of heartland rock 'n' roll and guitar-driven alternative rock."
AllMusic wrote that Salem's "serious but not humorless lyrics have an almost novelistic detail to them, especially on the haunting 'Chemical Night Train', and the band ... rocks throughout." The Press-Telegram considered Glimmer to be the fifth best album of 1996.
Country | Alternative | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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