Brand New by Tomorrow Money Mark

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Vinyl LP

  • Release Date: 02/27/2007
  • Sales Rank: 113,400
  • Label: BRUSHFIRE RECORDS
  • UPC: 602517231122
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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Brand New by Tomorrow

1LISTENColor of Your Blues 3:20
2LISTENPick Up the Pieces 3:25
3LISTENSummer Blue 3:25
4LISTENPretend to Sleep 2:21
5LISTENMy Loss, Your Gain 3:05
6LISTENEveryday I Die a Little 3:09
7LISTENRadiate Nothing 3:15
8LISTENBlack Butterfly 3:32
9LISTENNice to Me 2:51
10LISTENEyes That Ring 3:48
11LISTENBrand New by Tomorrow 3:21

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Money Mark was due for a vocal album after the instrumental Change Is Coming, and he was long due for any kind of release, considering it had been five and a half years since that record. So, praise is due to Jack Johnson for green-lighting the recording of Brand New by Tomorrow on his Brushfire label after he heard some early demos. (The two share a friend and producer in Mario Caldato, Jr.) Although Johnson and Money Mark don't seem to have much in common on the surface, their laid-back approach to the music of the '70s is similar -- be it singer/songwriter pop or funk -- and their one collaboration here, "Pick Up the Pieces," is a happy marriage. (Fortunately, Johnson's help is limited to the songwriting.) Elsewhere, Mark is just as spot-on with his songwriting and his gadgety one-man-band playing, although the vocals take more of the limelight than on past records. (Apparently, the drums on the early demos were a little harder before Caldato produced a mix that had, as Mark put it, "more wrist and less forearm.") He's only improved as a vocalist, often double-tracking his vocals for ghostly harmony, and keeping his instrumental prowess to just a few tricks per song. Mark described this as a post-9/11 record (Change Is Coming was released in early September 2001), and there are elements of sadness or melancholia to songs like "Everyday I Die a Little," "Summer Blue," and "Color of Your Blues," but Mark's laid-back stride keeps the affair surprisingly buoyant. John Bush, All Music Guide

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