Ten Years After (Tommy Keene album) explained

Ten Years After
Type:studio
Artist:Tommy Keene
Cover:Keeneten.jpg
Released:February 27, 1996
Genre:Power pop, rock
Label:Matador[1]
Prev Title:Based on Happy Times
Prev Year:1989
Next Title:Isolation Party
Next Year:1998

Ten Years After is Tommy Keene's fourth studio album, released in 1996.[2] [3] It was his first for Matador Records (Catalog #OLE 177).

Production

The album was produced by Adam Schmitt.[4]

Critical reception

AllMusic called the album "a must for longtime fans, as well as anyone who appreciates intelligent and well-crafted pop/rock that maintains a sharp edge." Entertainment Weekly wrote that "Keene's smart lyrics and considerable melodic sense are intact but dated — the album is like a flower fossilized in amber."[5] Washington City Paper wrote that the album "finds Keene fulfilling the romantic bard's duty to toy with emotional calamity; the result is a series of dispatches on the skimpy rewards of rekindling a relationship that was doomed from the get-go."[6] CMJ New Music Monthly called it "a solid and inviting, relentlessly tuneful record."[7]

Track listing

All songs written by Tommy Keene, except where noted.

  1. "Going Out Again" – 2:19
  2. "Turning on Blue" – 4:16
  3. "Today and Tomorrow" – 4:29
  4. "Your Heart Beats Alone" – 4:03
  5. "If You're Getting Married Tonight" – 2:21
  6. "On the Runway" – 2:55
  7. "We Started Over Again" – 3:14
  8. "Silent Town" – 4:02
  9. "Good Thing Going" – 2:54
  10. "Compromise" – 3:03
  11. "You Can't Wait for Time" – 2:11
  12. "Before the Lights Go Down" – 3:57
  13. "It's Not True" (Pete Townshend) – 1:28
    • Originally recorded by The Who in 1965, this song does not appear on the CD's or LP's track list.

Personnel

The band

Additional musicians

Production

Additional credits

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tommy Keene – Ten Years After – This Day In Matador History.
  2. Web site: Tommy Keene | Biography & History. AllMusic.
  3. Web site: Tommy Keene Should Have Been Bigger. But He Didn't Need to Be.. Dave. Holmes. November 29, 2017. Esquire.
  4. Web site: Tommy Keene . Trouser Press . 28 October 2020.
  5. Web site: Ten Years After. EW.com.
  6. Web site: Ten Years After. February 23, 1996. Washington City Paper.
  7. Reviews . CMJ New Music Monthly . March 1996 . 40.