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Blow Up

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Download links and information about Blow Up by The Smithereens. This album was released in 1991 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 47:58 minutes.

Artist: The Smithereens
Release date: 1991
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 47:58
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Top of the Pops 4:33
2. Too Much Passion 4:35
3. Tell Me When Did Things Go So Wrong 2:22
4. Evening Dress 3:12
5. Get a Hold of My Heart 4:22
6. Indigo Blues 4:58
7. Now and Then 3:50
8. Girl In Room 12 3:22
9. Anywhere You Are 3:44
10. Over and Over Again 3:17
11. It's Alright 3:45
12. If You Want the Sun to Shine 5:58

Details

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Sometimes it seems like the Smithereens' entire career was mistimed. After the relative success of 11, Pat DiNizio and company returned with their most straightforward and mainstream-ready release yet in Blow Up. Produced by Ed Stasium, the mix is arena ready and clean, and DiNizio co-wrote two of the disc's most accessible songs with songwriters Diane Warren and Julian Lennon. The first single, the string-laden Philly soul of "Too Much Passion" not only cracked the Top 40, but it placed at number 38, one position higher than their previous biggest hit, "A Girl Like You." That's where the success story ends. If there was ever a time for an alternative band to opt for a slicker sound, 1991 wasn't it. Blow Up was released within a week of Nirvana's Nevermind, and that album would quickly change alternative radio formats forever, squeezing out largely pop-oriented bands like the Smithereens. Also, "Too Much Passion" was the most adult contemporary single the Smithereens ever released, which meant a good deal of their new audience came on board expecting more of the same, and found only Warren's "Get a Hold of My Heart" to be similar. Still, the Smithereens never released a bad record, and Blow Up is in fact a quite good one: Much like 11 before it, Blow Up is a collection of catchy, blue-collar power pop distinguished by DiNizio's often moody outlook.