New West Motel

New West Motel
Studio album by The Walkabouts
Released 1993
Genre Alternative rock, alternative country
Length 62:41
Label Sub Pop
Producer Ed Brooks, The Walkabouts
The Walkabouts chronology
Scavenger
(1991)
New West Motel
(1993)
Satisfied Mind
(1993)

New West Motel is the fifth studio album by alternative rock band The Walkabouts. It was released in 1993 on Sub Pop Records.[1] It is a double album, where all songs are credited to Chris Eckman or/and The Walkabouts except for a cover of Texan cult musician Townes Van Zandt's "Snake Mountain Blues".[2]

Track listing

Source: Allmusic[2]
All songs written by The Walkabouts, except were noted. All lyrics written by Chris Eckman, except were noted.

  1. "Jack Candy" – 4:41
  2. "Sundowner" – 3:38
  3. "Grand Theft Auto" – 5:41
  4. "Break It Down Gently" – 3:36
  5. "Your Hope Shines" – 4:14
  6. "Murdering Stone" – 3:18
  7. "Sweet Revenge" – 5:44
  8. "Glad Nation's Death Song" – 4:21
  9. "Long Time Here" – 4:19
  10. "Wondertown (Part One)" – 1:23
  11. "Drag This River" – 4:02
  12. "Snake Mountain Blues" (Townes Van Zandt) – 5:47
  13. "Findlay's Motel" (string arrangement by Mark Nichols) – 6:36
  14. "Unholy Dreams" – 5:21

The album was produced during November and December 1992. It was engineered at Clearwater Productions, Gig Harbor, Washington and Bad Animals Seattle, Washington.

Release history[1]

Region Date Label Format Catalog
Germany 1993 Sub Pop Records 2xLP SP 81/252
CD SPCD 81/252, RS-CMD028[3]
February 19, 1993 Glitterhouse Records GRCD 252[4]
United States 1993 Creativeman Disc CMD-028
Greece 1999 ΠΟΠ + POK (Magazine) GRCD 252

Personnel

The Walkabouts
Bravura String Quartet

strings on "Findlay's Motel"

King Jesus Disciples

vocals on "Your Hopes Shines"

Additional musicians
Technical personnel
Additional personnel

The band photo was shot at the Five-O Tavern.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

Jason Ankeny writing in a positive review for Allmusic said that it features "edgy juxtaposition of blistering guitar workouts and plaintive acoustic cuts."[2]

References

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