More Hopes And Dreams: Difference between revisions
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In 1993 ''Volume'' reported that the song is simply the sound of a power station in San Francisco Bay, of which [[Mark Eitzel]] and [[Vudi]] overheard one day while out walking.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://americanmusicclub.com/index.php?title=Articles:Volume_-_April_1993 | work=Volume | date=April 1993 | author=David Cavanaugh | title=American Music Club | accessdate=March 27, 2018}}</ref> | In 1993 ''Volume'' reported that the song is simply the sound of a power station in San Francisco Bay, of which [[Mark Eitzel]] and [[Vudi]] overheard one day while out walking.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://americanmusicclub.com/index.php?title=Articles:Volume_-_April_1993 | work=Volume | date=April 1993 | author=David Cavanaugh | title=American Music Club | accessdate=March 27, 2018}}</ref> | ||
Eitzel told ''Lime Lizard'', “That’s a power station in San Francisco. I think it’s a systems check, to say that all the systems are going well. Me and [[Vudi]] were out there one night taking pictures and we listened to it and thought ‘This is it! We want this on the album’. We weren’t sure how we were going to use it, we just went and recorded it."<ref>{{cite web | url=http://americanmusicclub.com/index.php?title=Articles::Lime_Lizard_-_April_1993 | work=Lime Lizard | date=April 1993 | author=David Cox | title=American Music Club | accessdate=March 27, 2018}}</ref> | |||
== Personnel == | == Personnel == | ||
Latest revision as of 22:19, 7 April 2018
| "More Hopes And Dreams" | |
|---|---|
|
Error creating thumbnail: File missing Mercury cover | |
| Song by American Music Club from the album Mercury | |
| Released | March 15, 1993 |
| Format | LP / CD / CS |
| Length | 4:14 |
| Label | Reprise Records (US) / Virgin Records (UK) |
| Writer(s) | Mark Eitzel |
| Producer(s) | Mitchell Froom |
| Mercury track listing | |
| |
"More Hopes And Dreams" is the instrumental 13th song on American Music Club's sixth album, 1993’s Mercury.
In 1993 Volume reported that the song is simply the sound of a power station in San Francisco Bay, of which Mark Eitzel and Vudi overheard one day while out walking.[1]
Eitzel told Lime Lizard, “That’s a power station in San Francisco. I think it’s a systems check, to say that all the systems are going well. Me and Vudi were out there one night taking pictures and we listened to it and thought ‘This is it! We want this on the album’. We weren’t sure how we were going to use it, we just went and recorded it."[2]
Personnel
- Mark Eitzel - vocals, guitars
- Danny Pearson - guitar, mandolin, backing vocals
- Vudi - guitar, accordion, backing vocals
- Tim Mooney - drums
- Bruce Kaphan - pedal steel guitar
References
- ↑ David Cavanaugh (April 1993). "American Music Club". Volume. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
- ↑ David Cox (April 1993). "American Music Club". Lime Lizard. Retrieved March 27, 2018.