Nonsequitur (Of Silence) - The Sneakers, Rigby, Will
(Love's Like A) Cuban Crisis - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
On the Brink - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
Story of the Girl - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
What I Dig - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
Stuck on You - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
No Wonder - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
Some Kinda Fool - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
Decline and Fall - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
The Perfect Stranger - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
Be My Ambulance - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
I Will Understand - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
S'il Vous Pla?t - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
Quelle Folie - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
Mark Peril Theme - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
B&G Pies Commercial [*] - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
Decline and Fall [Fidelitorium Remix][*] - The Sneakers, Easter, Mitch
Love That Girl [Original Demo][*] - The Sneakers, Stamey, Chris
This 21-track remastered (and occasionally remixed) reissue of Sneakers' seminal indie recordings sounds like a period piece from a particularly pivotal period in American rock. Rejecting the bombast and indulgences that h... more »ad marked so much music of the 1970s, along with the bluesy bluster so often associated with its native South, the North Carolina band celebrated a mid-decade return to songs that were short, clever, and catchy. Led by Chris Stamey, who subsequently shared singer-songwriter roles with Mitch Easter, the band channeled the '60s influence of the Beatles and Byrds, but was even more inspired by Big Star, an early '70s Southern cult favorite steeped in Anglophilia. Stamey would soon enjoy a higher profile in the dB's and Easter in Let's Active, while both have continued to put their production stamp on plenty of music by other artists. From power pop to lo-fi indie rock, Sneakers showed the way. And if you're looking for the missing link between Big Star and R.E.M., it's right here. --Don McLeese« less
This 21-track remastered (and occasionally remixed) reissue of Sneakers' seminal indie recordings sounds like a period piece from a particularly pivotal period in American rock. Rejecting the bombast and indulgences that had marked so much music of the 1970s, along with the bluesy bluster so often associated with its native South, the North Carolina band celebrated a mid-decade return to songs that were short, clever, and catchy. Led by Chris Stamey, who subsequently shared singer-songwriter roles with Mitch Easter, the band channeled the '60s influence of the Beatles and Byrds, but was even more inspired by Big Star, an early '70s Southern cult favorite steeped in Anglophilia. Stamey would soon enjoy a higher profile in the dB's and Easter in Let's Active, while both have continued to put their production stamp on plenty of music by other artists. From power pop to lo-fi indie rock, Sneakers showed the way. And if you're looking for the missing link between Big Star and R.E.M., it's right here. --Don McLeese
"These mp3s are NOT from the album advertised (Nonsequitur of Silence), but in fact by an unknown Kingston Trio-type folk group. Unless I remember this album completely differently than when I originally heard these tunes in the 70s, THESE SONGS HAVE BEEN FILED IN ERROR."