Got No Shadow | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Mary Lou Lord |
Cover: | Got No Shadow.jpg |
Released: | January 27, 1998 |
Recorded: | Sunset Sound |
Genre: | Rock, folk |
Length: | 46:13 |
Label: | Sony/Work |
Producer: | Tom Rothrock/Rob Schnapf |
Prev Title: | Martian Saints |
Prev Year: | 1996 |
Next Title: | Live City Sounds |
Next Year: | 2001 |
Got No Shadow is an album by Mary Lou Lord, released in early 1998 on Sony Records/Work Records, a division of Sony Music. It is Lord's only full-length release on a major label.
"His Lamest Flame" is a reference to the Elvis Presley song "(Marie's the Name) His Latest Flame".
"She Had You" was a hit in the Philippines, and was played on FM radio in an NU 107 midnight countdown.
"Lights Are Changing", "She Had You", "Supergun" and "Down Along the Lea" were all written by Nick Saloman of British band The Bevis Frond. "Lights Are Changing" first appeared on the band's 1988 album Triptych. Saloman is one of several guitarists playing on this album and a creative collaborator as well; he and Lord also co-wrote "His Lamest Flame", "Two Boats" and "Subway". (Lord has recorded and performed other Saloman songs throughout her career.)
"Some Jingle Jangle Morning" is a re-recording of an original song that first appeared (as "Some Jingle Jangle Morning (When I'm Straight)") in 1993 on Lord's debut 7" vinyl single for Kill Rock Stars. The song is said to be about Kurt Cobain[1] – Mary Lou was briefly involved with Cobain in the early 1990s at the beginning of Nirvana's rise to fame.[2] [3]
"Shake Sugaree" is a folk/blues song written by Elizabeth Cotten, appearing on her 1967 album of the same name. "The Lucky One" is a Freedy Johnston cover.
Following five years of independent-label singles and EPs and a self-released cassette, Lord's long-awaited debut album received positive reviews and critical acclaim in Rolling Stone, Spin and other music publications, and from Robert Christgau in his Consumer Guide column in The Village Voice.