The Bottle Rockets 24 Hours a Day LP
$ 26.99
Bottle Rockets leader Brian Henneman worked as Uncle Tupelo’s guitar tech for a couple of years before forming an alt-country band that rivalled his former bosses. Released in Atlantic in 1997, 24 Hours a Day represented The Bottle Rockets’ chance at the big time; it’s their sole major label release, and they pulled out all the stops for this one, hiring former Del Lord Eric “Roscoe” Ambel to produce and revisiting “Indianapolis,” the song that got Henneman a record deal back in the early ‘90s. Alas, the record failed to break through commercially; but there will always be a place in our hearts for this kind of hard-driving, honest, tuneful rock and roll, best exemplified by “Perfect Far Away” and “When I Was Dumb.” For its LP debut, we’re pressing this underappreciated classic in coke bottle (natch) clear vinyl housed inside an album jacket with inner sleeve…limited to 1000 copies!
A1. Kit Kat Clock
A2. When I Was Dumb
A3. 24 Hours a Day
A4. Smokin’ 100’s Alone
A5. Slo Toms
A6. Indianapolis
B1. Things You Didn’t Know
B2. One of You
B3. Perfect Far Away
B4. Waitin’ on a Train
B5. Dohack Joe
B6. Rich Man
B7. Turn for the Worse