Little | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Vic Chesnutt |
Cover: | Vic Chesnutt Little.jpg |
Released: | 1990 |
Genre: | Folk rock |
Length: | 43:48 |
Label: | Texas Hotel[1] New West |
Producer: | Michael Stipe |
Next Title: | West of Rome |
Next Year: | 1991 |
Little is the debut album by Vic Chesnutt, released in 1990.[2] Produced by R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe, it was Chesnutt's first solo release.[1] The album was re-released on July 5, 2004, on the New West Records label and included five bonus tracks.
Deciding to pursue a solo career after the band, La-Di-Das, broke up, Chesnutt would play solo at the 40 Watt Club. It was there that R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe first spotted Chesnutt and helped him to produce his first album. Little was recorded in one day: October 6, 1988, and the session was produced by Michael Stipe at John Keane's studio in Athens, Georgia.[3] It was released on Texas Hotel Records in 1990.
Pitchfork Media gave Little an 8.6, stating:
The most elemental of any of Chesnutt's albums, it features just his warbly voice and precarious acoustic guitar, occasionally accompanied by Stipe's keyboard flourishes. As its title suggests, Little is about Chesnutt's Pike County childhood, a theme he would return to repeatedly as if thumbing worn and creased snapshots found at the bottom of a drawer. "Rabbit Box" begins, "While I was still in elementary school I discovered Daddy's tools," following the songwriter as he builds a rabbit box out of scrap lumber, but only catches a cat and a possum.[4]
All songs written by Vic Chesnutt
Bonus Tracks on the 2004 CD release on New West Records
"Stevie Smith" is named after the English poet and novelist Stevie Smith. It is a musical adaptation of her poem Not Waving But Drowning.[5]