Deep_(Silent_Running_album)

<i>Deep</i> (Silent Running album)

Deep (Silent Running album)

1989 studio album by Silent Running


Deep is the third studio album by Northern Irish band Silent Running, released by Atlantic in 1989.

Quick Facts Deep, Studio album by Silent Running ...

Background

Deep was Silent Running's second album for Atlantic and showed the band shift towards a more rock-orientated sound. Drummer Ian Gault performed on most of the album and co-wrote seven of the tracks, but he left the band over musical differences before recording was completed.[1] The band were satisfied with Deep, believing it to be their best work and were hopeful that it would achieve commercial success, particularly in the US.[2] "Local Hero" was issued as a promotional single in the US.[3] The band were scheduled to shoot a music video for the song in January 1990, but this did not materialise.[4]

Critical reception

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Upon its release, Guy Henderson of the Torquay Herald Express felt that, with Deep, Silent Running "prove themselves a valuable commodity, putting a hard edge onto some first class songs". He described the band as "a good prospect to watch for in the future" and picked "Deep in the Heart of Nowhere" as "the best of ten top-quality tracks".[7] Hi-Fi News & Record Review considered it "state-of-the-art wall-of-sound music which should endear this fine Irish trio to American ears" and noted the album's "wonderful melodies, plenty of gloss but with a suprisingly 'live' feel".[6]

Eamon Carr of the Evening Herald wrote, "Silent Running's new album is certainly noisy. At times it's naggingly familiar. A bit like Big Country imitating U2 jamming on Cactus World News covers, though the songs are slightly better than C.W.N.'s."[8] Sunday Life noted there were "no surprises" on the album, "just a professional refining of their sound for the American stadium market" with "singalong anthems" and "squealing guitar solos". The reviewer added, "All fine and dandy as far as it goes, but it lacks any real character. Hundreds of bands are ploughing the same furrow, and enough are doing it better to leave Silent Running superfluous to requirements."[9]

Track listing

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All tracks are written by Peter Gamble, Richard Collett, Tony Scott and Ian Gault, except where noted.

Personnel

Silent Running

  • Peter Gamble – vocals, guitar
  • Tony Scott – guitar
  • Richard Collett – bass

Additional musicians

  • Adrian Lee – keyboards
  • Paul Rocks – keyboards
  • Clive Gates – additional keyboards
  • Frankie LaRocka – drums
  • Ian Gault – drums
  • Joe Bonadio – percussion
  • Steve Sidelnyk – percussion
  • Carol Godden – backing vocals
  • Leslie Ritter – backing vocals
  • Amy Fradon – backing vocals
  • Adrian Baker – backing vocals

Production

  • Silent Running – production (tracks 1–4)
  • Peter Denenberg – production (tracks 1–4), engineering (tracks 1–4), remixing (tracks 6–8)
  • Frankie LaRocka – production (tracks 1–4), remixing (tracks 6–8)
  • Tom Leinbach – assistant engineering (tracks 1–4)
  • John Eden – production (tracks 5–10)
  • Sarah Jarman – tape operator

Other


References

  1. Greer, Robin (25 August 1989). "Band digs deep for inspiration". News Letter. p. 20. Retrieved 15 December 2023 via British Newspaper Archive.
  2. Fitzsymons, Paddy (18 June 1989). "Silent prayer". Sunday Life. p. 24. Retrieved 15 December 2023 via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. Local Hero (US CD promotional single). Silent Running. Atlantic Records. 1989. PR 3148-2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  4. Greer, Robin (22 December 1989). "Hot-shot trio hit US chart". News Letter. p. 17. Retrieved 15 December 2023 via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. "Rock/Pop/Jazz: Capsules". Hi-Fi News & Record Review. Vol. 34, no. 12. Link House Magazines Ltd. December 1989. p. 145. ISSN 0142-6230.
  6. Henderson, Guy (11 October 1989). "Record review: The Stones are still rolling". Torquay Herald Express. p. 15. Retrieved 15 December 2023 via British Newspaper Archive.
  7. Carr, Eamon (1 September 1989). "Aye... Niall leads the bid for stardom". Evening Herald. p. 12. Retrieved 15 December 2023 via British Newspaper Archive.
  8. "Nightlife3: Dylan back in top form". Sunday Life. 17 September 1989. p. 25. Retrieved 15 December 2023 via British Newspaper Archive.

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