What a Crying Shame The Mavericks

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/01/1994
  • Sales Rank: 20,350
  • Label: MCA NASHVILLE
  • UPC: 008811096120

Listener Rating: (1 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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What a Crying Shame

1LISTENThere Goes My Heart 3:16
2LISTENWhat a Crying Shame 3:50
3LISTENPretend 3:37
4LISTENI Should Have Been True 5:14
5LISTENThe Things You Said To Me 3:31
6LISTENJust a Memory 2:24
7LISTENAll That Heaven Will Allow 3:34
8LISTENNeon Blue 3:56
9LISTENO What A Thrill 3:13
10LISTENAin't Found Nobody 3:18
11LISTENThe Losing Side Of Me 3:51

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The Mavericks fully hit their stride with their third album, 1994's What a Crying Shame, in which the band's blend of rootsy country and vintage pop sounds finally found the balance they'd been searching for. While producer Don Cook gave the band a significantly glossier sound than that of their first two albums, with a hefty number of guest musicians (and guest songwriters) on board, remarkably enough the Mavericks' personality wasn't subsumed in the process; if anything, the high-priced help seemed to have prodded the boys into playing at the top of their game. Raul Malo's keening tenor gets a superb workout on "I Should Have Been True" and the title cut (the latter of which boasts a guitar hook Roger McGuinn would have been proud to come up with), while "Pretend" and "There Goes My Heart" are honky tonk floor-fillers of the first order. Robert Reynolds and Paul Deakin are a rhythm section who can give these songs the nervy drive of a rock band without betraying the Mavericks' country leanings, and they give the covers of "All That Heaven Will Allow" and "O What a Thrill" a taut foundation most contemporary Nashville acts lack. Truth to tell, What a Crying Shame doesn't have a single dud track, and offers encouraging proof that it's still possible to make an engaging and idiosyncratic country album while signed to the Nashville division of a major label...and the best news is, the band managed to turn that accomplishment into a hat trick over the next few years. Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

A Crying Shame If Missed....by TJ88

Reader Rating:
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November 11, 2009: This is the only one that I bought after listening to their other more recent albums. I thought this one is their better effort. For fans of Roy Orbison and those who appreciate the soulfulness of the artists of yesteryear, you would want to check this out. They did not sound overly country and western. I suppose this is why I enjoy it very much.