auf Lager
AOR/West Coast
Original 1990
Near mint condition
Credits:
Barney Bentall (vocals, guitar) Doug McFetridge (lead guitar; BRANDON WOLF) Jack Guppy (drums) Will Froese (keyboards) Kevin Swain (bass; BRANDON WOLF) Barry Muir (bass; replaced Swain) Cam Bowman (keyboards; replaced Froese) Colin Nairne (guitar); replaced McFetridge)
Produced by Danny Kortchmar
Tracks:
1. Crime Against Love 2. It's Over 3. Don't Talk About Yesterday 4. Goin' Places 5. Nothing Hurts (Like The Words Of The One U Love) 6. Life Could Be Worse 7. Dark Nights/Dark Road 8. When She Was Mine 9. I Gotta Go 10. Lost Weekend
Barney Bentall (aka Franklin) spent his teenage years holed up on Keat Island, British Columbia with songwriter Gary Fraser. By the late '70's Bentall was fronting a band under his new pseudonym Brandon Wolf doing slashing satire and throwing in healthy doses of the Fraser/Franklin originals.
With quirky tunes like the Dylan send-up "Blonde On Blonde On Blonde" Brandon Wolf was signed to A & M Records. They issued a 4 song EP on A & M's short-lived Debut Series which suffered at retail because retailers were charging full album prices for these mini albums.
Bentall went back to the drawing board with Nairne and Guppy to form the trio The Legendary Hearts (a name taken from a Lou Reed album title) in 1983. As time passed they added Bowman and Muir.
Soon Bruce Allen's management company was handling the case but they intended the Hearts material to go straight into the hands of slick production whizzes Bruce Fairbairn or Bob Rock. And despite caving into releasing a much ignored indie album with Bob Rock, Bentall wanted the material to mature and waited until Jehanne Languedoc at Finklestein Management approached with Finklestein and CBS Records fully behind them before committing any more material to tape.
In under a year the band's eponymous debut was out and burning up the charts with the first hit "Something To Live For". A succession of albums, tours and rave reviews finally landed Bentall some US exposure. |