Wandering as Water

Wandering As Water
Studio album by Chris Brokaw
Released 2003
Recorded October 7, 2003
Genre Alternative rock, Acoustic rock, Folk, Alternative folk
Length 54:13
Label Return to Sender
Producer Paul Q. Kolderie
Chris Brokaw chronology
Red Cities
(2002)
Wandering As Water
(2003)
i was born, but... (soundtrack)
(2004)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]
Pitchfork [2]

Wandering As Water is Chris Brokaw's second solo album, the follow-up to 2002's Red Cities. Recorded by Paul Q. Kolderie on February 24, 2003 at Camp Street, Cambridge, MA, Wandering As Water was released in mid-2003 by Return To Sender Records in Germany. The album was released in a digipak limited edition of 2,000 copies.

Reviewing Wandering As Water, Pitchfork called it "[o]ne of the most overlooked gems of the past year [2003]",[2] going on to assert that Brokaw's "acuity with control and complexity creates a subtle, unspoken poetry."[2] Allmusic stated that although "[t]he acoustic set-up works very well for Brokaw's worn voice, [...] some songs he chose actually suffer from being fleshed out."[1]

"Shoot Me First", "Recidivist", and "German Song" were written and first recorded by Brokaw's previous band, Come, whilst "Embryonic Journey" was composed by Jorma Kaukonen and originally performed by Jefferson Airplane. "Ba-Di-Da" was written by American folk singer-songwriter Fred Neil.

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "Cranberries"  Chris Brokaw 3:40
2. "La Playa"  Chris Brokaw 4:46
3. "My Idea"  Chris Brokaw and Tom Morgan 2:36
4. "Calimoxcho"  Chris Brokaw 2:26
5. "My Confidante"  Chris Brokaw 3:17
6. "Ba-Di-Da"  Fred Neil 3:15
7. "Bath House"  Chris Brokaw 2:02
8. "Shoot Me First"  Come 3:53
9. "Sagamore Bridge"  Chris Brokaw 4:09
10. "Embryonic Journey"  Jorma Kaukonen 2:01
11. "Recidivist"  Come 4:39
12. "Dresden Promenade"  Chris Brokaw 4:51
13. "German Song"  Come 5:32
14. "Bricks"  Chris Brokaw 3:16
15. "The Fields"  Chris Brokaw 3:47

Personnel

Additional personnel

References

  1. 1 2 François Couture. "Wandering As Water Review". Allmusic. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  2. 1 2 3 Brandon Stosuy (December 8, 2003). "Review of Chris Brokaw's Wandering as Water (Return to Sender, 2003)". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2013-04-09.

External links

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