Pop Beloved Explained

Pop Beloved
Type:Album
Artist:The Reivers
Border:yes
Released:1991
Genre:Rock
Length:42:40
Label:DB
Producer:John Croslin
Prev Title:End Of The Day
Prev Year:1989
Next Title:Second Story
Next Year:2013

Pop Beloved is the fourth album released by The Reivers, in 1991. After two albums on major label Capitol Records that were critically well-reviewed but commercially underperforming, they returned to the independent DB Records.[1]

In her review of this record, Entertainment Weekly writer Gina Arnold gave it an "A" grade and said that "songwriter John Croslin sympathetically evokes the minuscule pleasures within the boredom of everyday life."[2] Michael Corcoran of the Chicago Sun-Times also gave the album a strong review, saying that it contained "six or seven of the best songs that John Croslin and Kim Longacre have ever written" and was "irrefutable evidence that the Reivers are one of the best bands in existence."[3]

After this album, the band dissolved[4] and did not release another album until 2013.[5]

Track listing

  1. "Breathin' Easy" (4:45)
  2. "Over And Over" (3:34)
  3. "Dragon Flies" (3:51)
  4. "What You Wanna Do" (3:17)
  5. "Keep Me Guessing" (3:39)
  6. "Chinatown" (3:48)
  7. "If I Had A Little Time Without You" (2:36)
  8. "Katie" (2:41)
  9. "Other Side" (3:20)
  10. "Pop Beloved" (3:00)
  11. "It's All One" (5:04)
  12. "Second Chance" (2:41)

Notes and References

  1. Robert Baird, "Thieves Like Them: The Reivers Steal Away To A Label That Understands Them", Phoenix New Times, July 17, 1991.
  2. [Gina Arnold]
  3. Michael Corcoran, "Reivers roar back with 'Pop Beloved' ", Chicago Sun-Times, May 5, 1991, via HighBeam Research.
  4. Michael Bertin, Pop Beloved: Revisiting the Reivers, Austin Chronicle, April 26, 2002.
  5. Michael Toland, "Review: The Reivers, Second Story", Austin Chronicle, February 1, 2013.