Emits Showers of Sparks | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1998 | |||
Studio | Hyde Street | |||
Genre | Psychedelic pop [1] | |||
Label | Warner Bros. | |||
Producer | John Croslin | |||
Sixteen Deluxe chronology | ||||
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Emits Showers of Sparks is the second album by the American band Sixteen Deluxe, released in 1998. [1] [2] The first single was "Purple". [3] The band supported the album with a North American tour that included film projection and a liquid light component. [4] [5] The album was delayed several months, and Warner Bros. Records eventually dropped the band, in part due to Sixteen Deluxe's reluctance to keep touring. [6] [7]
Recorded at Hyde Street Studios, in San Francisco, the album was produced by John Croslin. [8] [9] Most of the songs were written on acoustic guitar. [10] Unlike on their debut album, Sixteen Deluxe were less concerned about burying their pop songs under effects and distortion. [8] "Large Animal Clinic" uses Carrie Clark's lead vocal backed by her vocal harmonies. [11]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [12] |
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution | B+ [13] |
Austin American-Statesman | [3] |
Entertainment Weekly | B+ [14] |
Fort Worth Star-Telegram | [15] |
Knoxville News Sentinel | [11] |
Lincoln Journal Star | [16] |
Los Angeles Daily News | [17] |
USA Today | [18] |
The Salt Lake Tribune noted that "the formula isn't new, a hard-edged guitar attack with pop melodies, laced with psychedelic effects." [19] The San Diego Union-Tribune said that "the most successful efforts here, 'Let It Go' and 'Captain Kirk's Z-Man House of Fun/Mixed Up', are bluesy, melodic and multilayered gems that culminate in slick psychedelic guitar noise." [20] Entertainment Weekly opined that "Sixteen Deluxe offers a witty pastiche of clean-cut '80s pop layered with up-to-the-second guitar-and-electronica distortion." [14] USA Today labeled Emits Showers of Sparks "warm classic pop made rugged by guitar fuzz, electronic static and ... barbed harmonies." [18]
The Lincoln Journal Star stated that, "through the entrancing, softly cool vocals of Carrie Clark and a gruffer variety from Chris Smith, Sixteen Deluxe mixes quality melodies with lots of noise, primarily from guitars, but gets extra depth from percussion and organ." [16] The Los Angeles Daily News determined that the band "create little dark musical corners in even the seemingly cheeriest places." [17] CMJ New Music Monthly concluded that the album "brings on uneasy relief by inducing alternating states of feverish anxiety and narcoleptic bliss." [21] The Knoxville News Sentinel noted that, while "Clark sprints over the blustery tracks with lithe melody, occasional lead vocalist Chris Smith is a weak and flavorless liability." [11]
AllMusic wrote that the "lyrics are more prominent throughout ... no matter who is singing them, at times perhaps embracing a Generation X aesthetic a touch too closely." [12] In 2009, Spin included Sixteen Deluxe on its list of "The 100 Greatest Bands You've (Probably) Never Heard", deeming Emits Showers of Sparks one of "the 1990s' most pleasurably squalling albums." [22]
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Sniffy Woe" | |
2. | "Purple" | |
3. | "Burning Leaves" | |
4. | "Let It Go" | |
5. | "No Shock (In Bubble)" | |
6. | "Giver" | |
7. | "Large Animal Clinic" | |
8. | "Lullaby" | |
9. | "Wrist Rocket" | |
10. | "Mexican Train" | |
11. | "Honey" | |
12. | "Captain Kirk's Z-Man House of Fun" | |
13. | "Mixed Up" |
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