Love Gone Sour, Suspicion, and Bad Debt explained

Love Gone Sour, Suspicion, and Bad Debt
Type:Album
Artist:The Clarks
Cover:The_clarks_love_gone.jpg
Released:1994
Genre:Rock
Length:53:08
Label:King Mouse Records[1]
Prev Title:The Clarks
Prev Year:1991
Next Title:Someday Maybe
Next Year:1996

Love Gone Sour, Suspicion, and Bad Debt is the third album by the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, band the Clarks.[2] [1] The first single, "Cigarette", makes reference to Fayette County, the rural county located 35 miles south of Pittsburgh from which lead singer Scott Blasey hails. "Treehouse" and "Madeline" were local radio hits.[3]

The album sold around 16,000 copies and led to a major label contract with MCA.[4] It sold out of its initial pressing.[5]

Critical reception

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote that the album "cruises along with a hook-heavy obsessiveness that puts it right up there with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers and every other guilty pleasure left over from the '70s." In 1996, Erie Times-News determined that it "completed a move toward a rootsier, Americana vibe that occasionally conjured up influences like Tom Petty, Bob Seger, Bruce Springsteen, and the Silos."[6]

Track listing

  1. "Treehouse" – 3:00
  2. "Cigarette" – 4:41
  3. "Promised Land" – 5:09
  4. "Now and Then" – 2:55
  5. "Sun Don't Shine" – 4:02
  6. "Better Day" – 2:34
  7. "I'm the Only" – 4:38
  8. "Behind My Back" – 3:34
  9. "Climb Down" – 4:12
  10. "Madeline" – 3:38
  11. "Tell Me" – 3:45
  12. "Already Down" – 3:44
  13. "Sound the Warning" – 3:08
  14. "Let You Go" – 4:08

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Love Gone Sour Suspicion and Bad Debt. Nathalie op de. Beeck. March 24, 1995. Washington City Paper.
  2. Web site: The Clarks Biography, Songs, & Albums. AllMusic.
  3. Lyon . Debbi . Pittsburgh . Billboard . July 30, 1994 . 106 . 31 . 17.
  4. Reece . Doug . CLARKSVILLE . Billboard . Mar 15, 1997 . 109 . 11 . 30.
  5. News: Githens . Lauri . Road trip . The Buffalo News . January 5, 1995 . D1.
  6. News: DR. ROCK . Erie Times-News . April 4, 1996.