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Strangers Almanac

Strangers Almanac is the second studio album by American alternative country band Whiskeytown, released on July 29, 1997, on Outpost and Geffen Records. The album was reissued as a deluxe edition with bonus tracks and an additional disc of previously unreleased material on March 4, 2008.[11]

Strangers Almanac
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 29, 1997
Recorded1996–1997
StudioWoodland (Nashville)
Ocean Way (Hollywood)
GenreAlternative country
Length51:40
LanguageEnglish
LabelGeffen, Outpost, Moodfood
ProducerJim Scott
Whiskeytown chronology
In Your Wildest Dreams
(1997)
Strangers Almanac
(1997)
Pneumonia
(2001)
Singles from Strangers Almanac
  1. "16 Days"
    Released: July 1997
  2. "Yesterday's News"
    Released: February 1998

Background and production edit

Throughout 1996, Whiskeytown recorded new material in Chapel Hill and Durham, North Carolina. Two separate recording sessions – dubbed the "Barn's On Fire" sessions and the "Baseball Park" sessions – produced several songs that were later re-recorded for Strangers Almanac.[12] And while praising everyone involved in making Strangers, principal songwriter Ryan Adams once remarked in an interview that he preferred these earlier songs to the final album.[13] Tracks from these sessions would later be released on the reissues of Faithless Street and Strangers Almanac.

The road to making Strangers was a rocky one – in late 1996, bassist Steve Grothman and drummer Skillet Gilmore left the band on the same day, suddenly placing the future of Whiskeytown in doubt. It was then that violinist Caitlin Cary also considered leaving the band, while Adams toyed with the idea of signing as a solo artist with A&M Records. But in the end, the remaining band members soldiered on and, in February 1997, Adams, Cary, and guitarist Phil Wandscher traveled to Woodland Studios in Nashville to record their major label debut. Drummer Steve Terry and bassist Jeff Rice were also added to the lineup.[14] Producer Jim Scott was selected due to his previous work on Tom Petty's Wildflowers album.[12]

The sessions featured plenty of give-and-take between the young, scrappy band and the older, more-polished producer. Said Adams later: "He [Jim Scott] wanted to make something flow. He wanted to make our record work, whereas we wanted our record to get damaged." And for his part, Scott points to a particularly raw-sounding guitar part in the song "Everything I Do" and says, "I listen to that and go, oh my God, we should've redone that guitar because it just is a little rough on such a beautiful song. But that's maybe what they liked about it; they were like, 'No, that's cool'... Maybe that was the bruise on the apple that they were looking for."[12]

The first notes heard on the album – Adams picking out a slow acoustic guitar line at the beginning of "Inn Town" – were played using an Alvarez guitar purchased for $100 at a Nashville pawn shop. Adams had arrived in Nashville without a guitar because of an unfortunate mishap: on the day they were leaving for Nashville, the band met in a parking lot to load their gear into a van for the trip. After loading their gear, everyone hopped in the van and drove off. It was only later that they realized they'd left Adams's guitars behind, still sitting in the parking lot.[12] The title of the album's opening track is a reference to fellow North Carolinian/Superchunk frontman Mac McCaughan and his band Wwax, who released a song with the same title.[13]

The song "Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight" features Alejandro Escovedo on vocals. The band had previously covered Escovedo's True Believers song "The Rain Won't Help You When It's Over", which is featured on Disc 2 of the album's 2008 reissue.[12]

The understated piano accents on "Avenues" were played by Adams. Producer Scott believes that this was the first time that the young songwriter had ever played piano on a recording.[12]

About the song "Losering", Adams says: "I love 'Losering' because I think it makes a beautiful statement with only about six words. I coulda put more extremely well-written, musically perfect songs on the record but decided not to because I was proud of the fact that there was finally some experimenting going on in the band. And 'Losering' was one of them – 'Losering' was originally just about a six or seven-bar little hymn that I was writing, like Sun Ra or somebody might do – like A Love Supreme, you know, where they just mumble that in succession at the end of that Coltrane record? I kinda wanted to do something like that but maybe with an influence from The Byrds, you know. And I was really proud of that; I really thought that was amazing, so I love listening to it."[15]

After a month of recording at Woodland Studios, the band finished recording and mixing at Ocean Way Studios in Los Angeles.[12] Thirty-six songs were recorded for the album, of which thirteen made the final cut.[14][16]

Strangers Almanac Tour (1997–98) edit

In a 2008 interview with Independent Weekly, Adams admitted that the Strangers sessions were a very unhappy time for him personally. Depression, substance abuse, and a general dissatisfaction with the band plagued his time in Nashville.[17] In spite of this, Whiskeytown embarked on a grueling and turbulent tour that stretched out over the next 19 months.[18][19] The band first appeared as part of the "No Depression Tour" with fellow alt-country acts Old 97's, Hazeldine, and The Picketts in the Spring of 1997.[20]

After Strangers Almanac was released on July 29,[21] another round of touring ensued. This leg of the tour, dubbed the "RV Tour", found the band traveling between gigs in an RV.[22] On the whiskeytownavenues message board, tour manager Thomas O'Keefe called the tour "a 2-month trek in the US that still causes mental illness in those that were there."[23] One particular show at the Iota Club in Arlington, Virginia, found guitarist Phil Wandscher sitting above the stage for the entire performance, playing his guitar and occasionally throwing beer bottles down at singer Ryan Adams.[24][25] At another show in Lansing, MI, a fan threw tomatoes at the band's crew following an abbreviated set by the band.[26][27]

On September 10, the band recorded a live in-studio performance for the KCRW radio program "Brave New World", which was later released on the 2008 deluxe edition of Strangers.[12]

Following a contentious September 25 show at The Hurricane in Kansas City, the band splintered. Ryan Adams and Caitlin Cary played the remaining dates of the tour as an acoustic duo. Wandscher, an original member of the band,[28] would never play or record with Whiskeytown again.[18][22]

Wandscher's work on the Strangers Almanac album would later secure a record deal for his next band – thanks to a recommendation by Death Cab for Cutie's Chris Walla, who's a big fan of the album.[29]

Less than a month later, Whiskeytown had a new touring lineup and hit the road again. Joining Adams and Cary were ex-Firehose guitarist Ed Crawford, bassist Jenni Snyder, multi-instrumentalist Mike Daly, and the band's original drummer Skillet Gilmore.[28] In January 1998, this lineup taped a live performance for Austin City Limits. They also performed on a number of radio programs, including Mountain Stage, Acoustic Cafe, Modern Rock Live, and KMTT's Music Lounge.[19]

In late April, the band embarked on their very first European tour, but without Crawford or Snyder.[30] The Strangers tour continued in June as the band opened for John Fogerty, again with a new lineup of sidemen for Adams and Cary, including Brad Rice and Danny Kurtz from The Backsliders.[31]

Whiskeytown's ever-evolving lineup would prompt the band to poke fun at itself by selling T-shirts at shows that read: "I Played In Whiskeytown And All I Got Was This Lousy Goddamn T-Shirt!"[32]

In September, having now been on the road since March of the previous year, the band played another scandalous show – this time at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco. At the end of the show, after experiencing sound problems, a lukewarm crowd, and being told he could not smoke on stage, an upset Adams smashed his mic stand and tossed the monitors off the stage. He then got into an altercation with the venue's security, and was finally dragged away by band member Daly.[33][34]

By the final show of the tour in October 1998, the band was playing almost an entire set of brand-new, unreleased music, with barely any songs from Strangers Almanac – the very album which had launched the tour nearly two years before.[35]

It would prove to be Whiskeytown's final tour to date.

Track listing edit

Original release edit

All tracks written by Ryan Adams, except where noted.

  1. "Inn Town" – 5:51 (Adams, Wandscher)
  2. "Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight" – 3:14
  3. "Yesterday's News" – 2:49 (Adams, Wandscher)
  4. "16 Days" – 3:54
  5. "Everything I Do" – 4:31 (Adams, Wandscher)
  6. "Houses on the Hill" – 2:38 (Adams, Cary)
  7. "Turn Around" – 5:16 (Adams, Cary)
  8. "Dancing with the Women at the Bar" – 4:38
  9. "Waiting to Derail" – 3:54
  10. "Avenues" – 2:31
  11. "Losering" – 4:00
  12. "Somebody Remembers the Rose" – 2:30 (Adams, Wandscher)
  13. "Not Home Anymore" – 5:54

Deluxe edition edit

All tracks written by Ryan Adams, except where noted.

Disc one

  1. "Inn Town" – 5:51
  2. "Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight" – 3:14
  3. "Yesterday's News" – 2:49
  4. "16 Days" – 3:54
  5. "Everything I Do" – 4:31
  6. "Houses on the Hill" – 2:38
  7. "Turn Around" – 5:16
  8. "Dancing with the Women at the Bar" – 4:38
  9. "Waiting to Derail" – 3:54
  10. "Avenues" – 2:31
  11. "Losering" – 4:00
  12. "Somebody Remembers the Rose" – 2:30
  13. "Not Home Anymore" – 5:54
  14. "Houses on the Hill" (Live) (bonus track) – 3:42
  15. "Nurse with the Pills" (Live) (bonus track) – 4:40
  16. "I Don't Care What You Think About Me" (Live) (bonus track) – 3:18
  17. "Somebody Remembers the Rose" (Live) (bonus track) – 2:33
  18. "Turn Around" (Live) (bonus track) – 4:26
  • Tracks 14–18 are previously unreleased live in the studio recordings. They were originally broadcast 9/10/97 on "Brave New World", KCRW-FM Radio, Santa Monica, CA
  • Tracks 15 & 16 written by Ryan Adams

Disc two

  1. "Indian Gown" – 4:46 (Adams/Wandscher)
  2. "16 Days" (Demo) – 3:13
  3. "Somebody Remembers the Rose" (Demo) – 2:45 (Adams/Wandscher)
  4. "Avenues" (Demo) – 3:34
  5. "Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight" (Demo) – 2:43
  6. "Houses on the Hill" (Early Version) – 2:25 (Adams/Cary)
  7. "My Heart Is Broken" – 3:04 (Adams/Cary)
  8. "I Still Miss Someone" (Demo) – 2:24 (Johnny Cash/Roy Cash Jr.)
  9. "Kiss and Make-Up" – 3:31
  10. "Barn's on Fire" – 1:43
  11. "Dancing with the Women at the Bar" (Early Version) – 4:28
  12. "Dreams" – 5:49 (Stevie Nicks)
  13. "Breathe" – 4:07
  14. "Wither, I'm a Flower" (from the Hope Floats soundtrack) – 4:53
  15. "Luxury Liner" – 2:40 (Gram Parsons)
  16. "Theme for a Trucker" (from The End of Violence soundtrack) – 4:29
  17. "Streets of Sirens" – 3:44
  18. "Turn Around" (Early Version) – 4:02 (Adams/Cary)
  19. "10 Seconds Till the End of the World" – 4:15 (Adams/Wandscher)
  20. "Ticket Time" – 3:54 (Adams/Wandscher)
  21. "The Rain Won't Help You When It's Over" – 4:34 (Alejandro Escovedo)
  • Tracks 1, 6, 7, 10–13, 15, 17, and 19–21: the "Barn's on Fire" sessions.
  • Tracks 2, 3, and 5: the "Baseball Park" sessions.
  • All songs are previously unreleased, except for tracks 14 and 16.

Personnel edit

Musicians edit

  • Ryan Adams – acoustic and electric guitars, vocals, banjo, piano, percussion
  • Phil Wandscher – electric guitar, vocals, organ, percussion
  • Caitlin Cary – violin, vocals
  • Steven Terry – drums, vocals, percussion
  • Jeff Rice – bass guitar

Additional musicians edit

  • Alejandro Escovedo – vocals
  • John Ginty – piano, wurlitzer electric piano, Hammond b3 organ, church keys
  • Greg Leisz – pedal steel guitar, lap steel guitar, mandolin
  • Curt Bisquera – percussion
  • Bill Ladd – pedal steel guitar
  • Rick Latina – pedal steel guitar
  • Dan Navarro – trumpet
  • Crecencio Gonzalez – trombone
  • Jim Goodwin – alto saxophone
  • Jim Scott – percussion

Production edit

  • Produced, engineered and mixed by Jim Scott
  • Recorded at Woodland studios, Nashville and Ocean Way studios, Hollywood
  • Mixed at Ocean Way Studios, Hollywood
  • Mastered by Stephen Marcussen at Precision Mastering, Los Angeles.

References edit

  1. ^ Deming, Mark. "Strangers Almanac – Whiskeytown". AllMusic. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  2. ^ Hernandez, Raoul (May 2, 2008). "Otis Redding, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Whiskeytown". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  3. ^ Larkin, Colin (2009). "Whiskeytown". The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-199-72636-3. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  4. ^ Willman, Chris (August 1, 1997). "Stranger's Almanac". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  5. ^ Cox, Tom (January 16, 1998). "Whiskeytown: Stranger's Almanac (Geffen)". The Guardian.
  6. ^ Wisdom, James P. . Pitchfork. Archived from the original on June 5, 2003. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  7. ^ Staunton, Terry (June 2008). "Whiskeytown – Stranger's Almanac". Record Collector (350). Retrieved January 9, 2017.
  8. ^ Alden, Grant (August 7, 1997). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on December 13, 2002. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  9. ^ Howe, Sean (May 2008). "Reissues". Spin. 24 (5): 96. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
  10. ^ "Whiskeytown: Stranger's Almanac". Uncut: 109. [The album] still sounds like alt-country's high tide.
  11. ^ "Whiskeytown's 'Almanac' Bolstered For Reissue". Billboard.com. 2008-01-30. Retrieved 2008-02-04.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Blackstock, Peter (2008). Strangers Almanac Deluxe Edition (booklet). Whiskeytown. Santa Monica, California: Geffen. pp. 6–13. B0009410-02.
  13. ^ a b Currin, Grayson (1997). "Whiskeytown's Ryan Adams on Strangers Almanac". Independent Weekly. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  14. ^ a b Blackstock, Peter (1997). "Whiskeytown – Falling down, standing up: Americana and Roots Music". No Depression. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  15. ^ . 28 December 2001. Archived from the original on 2001-12-28. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  16. ^ Menconi, David (1997). "Whiskeytown Has Songs To Spare". Billboard. BPI Communications (published 1997-06-28). p. 10.
  17. ^ Currin, Grayson (2008-03-12). "Whiskeytown's Ryan Adams on Strangers Almanac". Independent Weekly. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  18. ^ a b "1997 Set Lists". Answeringbell.com. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  19. ^ a b "1998 Set Lists". Answeringbell.com. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  20. ^ Blackstock, Peter (1997). "Hello Stranger from Issue #9". No Depression. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  21. ^ Deming, Mark (1997-07-29). "Strangers Almanac – Whiskeytown". AllMusic. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  22. ^ a b "Yahoo! Groups". Launch.groups.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on January 5, 2013. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  23. ^ "Yahoo! Groups". Launch.groups.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2012. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  24. ^ "08/16/97". Answeringbell.com. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  25. ^ "Yahoo! Groups". Launch.groups.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on July 9, 2012. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  26. ^ "10/25/97". Answeringbell.com. 1997-10-24. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  27. ^ Currin, Grayson (2008-03-12). "Whiskeytown's Caitlin Cary on Strangers Almanac". Independent Weekly. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  28. ^ a b "Field Reportings from Issue #12". No Depression. 1997. Retrieved 2011-02-04.
  29. ^ Currin, Grayson (2008-03-12). "Whiskeytown's Strangers Almanac Gets Double-Disc Reissue Treatment". Independent Weekly. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  30. ^ Blackstock, Peter (1998). "Whiskeytown – Borderline (London, England)". No Depression. Retrieved 2011-02-04.
  31. ^ Ray, Linda (1999). "Chip Robinson – Sliding In and Out of Grace". No Depression. Retrieved 2011-02-04.
  32. ^ "Photographic image" (JPG). Lh6.ggpht.com. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  33. ^ Ganahl, Jane (1998-10-20). "Talkin' with the newest poet of rock". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2011-02-06.
  34. ^ duBrowa, Corey (2001-12-01). "Ryan Adams: Saving Private Ryan". Magnet Magazine. Retrieved 2011-02-06.
  35. ^ "October 2, 1998". Answeringbell.com. 1998-10-02. Retrieved 2011-07-06.

strangers, almanac, second, studio, album, american, alternative, country, band, whiskeytown, released, july, 1997, outpost, geffen, records, album, reissued, deluxe, edition, with, bonus, tracks, additional, disc, previously, unreleased, material, march, 2008. Strangers Almanac is the second studio album by American alternative country band Whiskeytown released on July 29 1997 on Outpost and Geffen Records The album was reissued as a deluxe edition with bonus tracks and an additional disc of previously unreleased material on March 4 2008 11 Strangers AlmanacStudio album by WhiskeytownReleasedJuly 29 1997Recorded1996 1997StudioWoodland Nashville Ocean Way Hollywood GenreAlternative countryLength51 40LanguageEnglishLabelGeffen Outpost MoodfoodProducerJim ScottWhiskeytown chronologyIn Your Wildest Dreams 1997 Strangers Almanac 1997 Pneumonia 2001 Singles from Strangers Almanac 16 Days Released July 1997 Yesterday s News Released February 1998 Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic 1 The Austin Chronicle 2 Encyclopedia of Popular Music 3 Entertainment WeeklyB 4 The Guardian 5 Pitchfork7 8 10 6 Record Collector 7 Rolling Stone 8 Spin 9 Uncut 10 Contents 1 Background and production 2 Strangers Almanac Tour 1997 98 3 Track listing 3 1 Original release 3 2 Deluxe edition 4 Personnel 4 1 Musicians 4 2 Additional musicians 4 3 Production 5 ReferencesBackground and production editThroughout 1996 Whiskeytown recorded new material in Chapel Hill and Durham North Carolina Two separate recording sessions dubbed the Barn s On Fire sessions and the Baseball Park sessions produced several songs that were later re recorded for Strangers Almanac 12 And while praising everyone involved in making Strangers principal songwriter Ryan Adams once remarked in an interview that he preferred these earlier songs to the final album 13 Tracks from these sessions would later be released on the reissues of Faithless Street and Strangers Almanac The road to making Strangers was a rocky one in late 1996 bassist Steve Grothman and drummer Skillet Gilmore left the band on the same day suddenly placing the future of Whiskeytown in doubt It was then that violinist Caitlin Cary also considered leaving the band while Adams toyed with the idea of signing as a solo artist with A amp M Records But in the end the remaining band members soldiered on and in February 1997 Adams Cary and guitarist Phil Wandscher traveled to Woodland Studios in Nashville to record their major label debut Drummer Steve Terry and bassist Jeff Rice were also added to the lineup 14 Producer Jim Scott was selected due to his previous work on Tom Petty s Wildflowers album 12 The sessions featured plenty of give and take between the young scrappy band and the older more polished producer Said Adams later He Jim Scott wanted to make something flow He wanted to make our record work whereas we wanted our record to get damaged And for his part Scott points to a particularly raw sounding guitar part in the song Everything I Do and says I listen to that and go oh my God we should ve redone that guitar because it just is a little rough on such a beautiful song But that s maybe what they liked about it they were like No that s cool Maybe that was the bruise on the apple that they were looking for 12 The first notes heard on the album Adams picking out a slow acoustic guitar line at the beginning of Inn Town were played using an Alvarez guitar purchased for 100 at a Nashville pawn shop Adams had arrived in Nashville without a guitar because of an unfortunate mishap on the day they were leaving for Nashville the band met in a parking lot to load their gear into a van for the trip After loading their gear everyone hopped in the van and drove off It was only later that they realized they d left Adams s guitars behind still sitting in the parking lot 12 The title of the album s opening track is a reference to fellow North Carolinian Superchunk frontman Mac McCaughan and his band Wwax who released a song with the same title 13 The song Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight features Alejandro Escovedo on vocals The band had previously covered Escovedo s True Believers song The Rain Won t Help You When It s Over which is featured on Disc 2 of the album s 2008 reissue 12 The understated piano accents on Avenues were played by Adams Producer Scott believes that this was the first time that the young songwriter had ever played piano on a recording 12 About the song Losering Adams says I love Losering because I think it makes a beautiful statement with only about six words I coulda put more extremely well written musically perfect songs on the record but decided not to because I was proud of the fact that there was finally some experimenting going on in the band And Losering was one of them Losering was originally just about a six or seven bar little hymn that I was writing like Sun Ra or somebody might do like A Love Supreme you know where they just mumble that in succession at the end of that Coltrane record I kinda wanted to do something like that but maybe with an influence from The Byrds you know And I was really proud of that I really thought that was amazing so I love listening to it 15 After a month of recording at Woodland Studios the band finished recording and mixing at Ocean Way Studios in Los Angeles 12 Thirty six songs were recorded for the album of which thirteen made the final cut 14 16 Strangers Almanac Tour 1997 98 editIn a 2008 interview with Independent Weekly Adams admitted that the Strangers sessions were a very unhappy time for him personally Depression substance abuse and a general dissatisfaction with the band plagued his time in Nashville 17 In spite of this Whiskeytown embarked on a grueling and turbulent tour that stretched out over the next 19 months 18 19 The band first appeared as part of the No Depression Tour with fellow alt country acts Old 97 s Hazeldine and The Picketts in the Spring of 1997 20 After Strangers Almanac was released on July 29 21 another round of touring ensued This leg of the tour dubbed the RV Tour found the band traveling between gigs in an RV 22 On the whiskeytownavenues message board tour manager Thomas O Keefe called the tour a 2 month trek in the US that still causes mental illness in those that were there 23 One particular show at the Iota Club in Arlington Virginia found guitarist Phil Wandscher sitting above the stage for the entire performance playing his guitar and occasionally throwing beer bottles down at singer Ryan Adams 24 25 At another show in Lansing MI a fan threw tomatoes at the band s crew following an abbreviated set by the band 26 27 On September 10 the band recorded a live in studio performance for the KCRW radio program Brave New World which was later released on the 2008 deluxe edition of Strangers 12 Following a contentious September 25 show at The Hurricane in Kansas City the band splintered Ryan Adams and Caitlin Cary played the remaining dates of the tour as an acoustic duo Wandscher an original member of the band 28 would never play or record with Whiskeytown again 18 22 Wandscher s work on the Strangers Almanac album would later secure a record deal for his next band thanks to a recommendation by Death Cab for Cutie s Chris Walla who s a big fan of the album 29 Less than a month later Whiskeytown had a new touring lineup and hit the road again Joining Adams and Cary were ex Firehose guitarist Ed Crawford bassist Jenni Snyder multi instrumentalist Mike Daly and the band s original drummer Skillet Gilmore 28 In January 1998 this lineup taped a live performance for Austin City Limits They also performed on a number of radio programs including Mountain Stage Acoustic Cafe Modern Rock Live and KMTT s Music Lounge 19 In late April the band embarked on their very first European tour but without Crawford or Snyder 30 The Strangers tour continued in June as the band opened for John Fogerty again with a new lineup of sidemen for Adams and Cary including Brad Rice and Danny Kurtz from The Backsliders 31 Whiskeytown s ever evolving lineup would prompt the band to poke fun at itself by selling T shirts at shows that read I Played In Whiskeytown And All I Got Was This Lousy Goddamn T Shirt 32 In September having now been on the road since March of the previous year the band played another scandalous show this time at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco At the end of the show after experiencing sound problems a lukewarm crowd and being told he could not smoke on stage an upset Adams smashed his mic stand and tossed the monitors off the stage He then got into an altercation with the venue s security and was finally dragged away by band member Daly 33 34 By the final show of the tour in October 1998 the band was playing almost an entire set of brand new unreleased music with barely any songs from Strangers Almanac the very album which had launched the tour nearly two years before 35 It would prove to be Whiskeytown s final tour to date Track listing editOriginal release edit All tracks written by Ryan Adams except where noted Inn Town 5 51 Adams Wandscher Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight 3 14 Yesterday s News 2 49 Adams Wandscher 16 Days 3 54 Everything I Do 4 31 Adams Wandscher Houses on the Hill 2 38 Adams Cary Turn Around 5 16 Adams Cary Dancing with the Women at the Bar 4 38 Waiting to Derail 3 54 Avenues 2 31 Losering 4 00 Somebody Remembers the Rose 2 30 Adams Wandscher Not Home Anymore 5 54 Deluxe edition edit All tracks written by Ryan Adams except where noted Disc one Inn Town 5 51 Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight 3 14 Yesterday s News 2 49 16 Days 3 54 Everything I Do 4 31 Houses on the Hill 2 38 Turn Around 5 16 Dancing with the Women at the Bar 4 38 Waiting to Derail 3 54 Avenues 2 31 Losering 4 00 Somebody Remembers the Rose 2 30 Not Home Anymore 5 54 Houses on the Hill Live bonus track 3 42 Nurse with the Pills Live bonus track 4 40 I Don t Care What You Think About Me Live bonus track 3 18 Somebody Remembers the Rose Live bonus track 2 33 Turn Around Live bonus track 4 26 Tracks 14 18 are previously unreleased live in the studio recordings They were originally broadcast 9 10 97 on Brave New World KCRW FM Radio Santa Monica CA Tracks 15 amp 16 written by Ryan Adams Disc two Indian Gown 4 46 Adams Wandscher 16 Days Demo 3 13 Somebody Remembers the Rose Demo 2 45 Adams Wandscher Avenues Demo 3 34 Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight Demo 2 43 Houses on the Hill Early Version 2 25 Adams Cary My Heart Is Broken 3 04 Adams Cary I Still Miss Someone Demo 2 24 Johnny Cash Roy Cash Jr Kiss and Make Up 3 31 Barn s on Fire 1 43 Dancing with the Women at the Bar Early Version 4 28 Dreams 5 49 Stevie Nicks Breathe 4 07 Wither I m a Flower from the Hope Floats soundtrack 4 53 Luxury Liner 2 40 Gram Parsons Theme for a Trucker from The End of Violence soundtrack 4 29 Streets of Sirens 3 44 Turn Around Early Version 4 02 Adams Cary 10 Seconds Till the End of the World 4 15 Adams Wandscher Ticket Time 3 54 Adams Wandscher The Rain Won t Help You When It s Over 4 34 Alejandro Escovedo Tracks 1 6 7 10 13 15 17 and 19 21 the Barn s on Fire sessions Tracks 2 3 and 5 the Baseball Park sessions All songs are previously unreleased except for tracks 14 and 16 Personnel editMusicians edit Ryan Adams acoustic and electric guitars vocals banjo piano percussion Phil Wandscher electric guitar vocals organ percussion Caitlin Cary violin vocals Steven Terry drums vocals percussion Jeff Rice bass guitar Additional musicians edit Alejandro Escovedo vocals John Ginty piano wurlitzer electric piano Hammond b3 organ church keys Greg Leisz pedal steel guitar lap steel guitar mandolin Curt Bisquera percussion Bill Ladd pedal steel guitar Rick Latina pedal steel guitar Dan Navarro trumpet Crecencio Gonzalez trombone Jim Goodwin alto saxophone Jim Scott percussion Production edit Produced engineered and mixed by Jim Scott Recorded at Woodland studios Nashville and Ocean Way studios Hollywood Mixed at Ocean Way Studios Hollywood Mastered by Stephen Marcussen at Precision Mastering Los Angeles References edit Deming Mark Strangers Almanac Whiskeytown AllMusic Retrieved October 31 2016 Hernandez Raoul May 2 2008 Otis Redding Lynyrd Skynyrd and Whiskeytown The Austin Chronicle Retrieved October 31 2016 Larkin Colin 2009 Whiskeytown The Encyclopedia of Popular Music 4th ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 199 72636 3 Retrieved October 31 2016 Willman Chris August 1 1997 Stranger s Almanac Entertainment Weekly Retrieved October 31 2016 Cox Tom January 16 1998 Whiskeytown Stranger s Almanac Geffen The Guardian Wisdom James P Whiskeytown Stranger s Almanac Pitchfork Archived from the original on June 5 2003 Retrieved October 31 2016 Staunton Terry June 2008 Whiskeytown Stranger s Almanac Record Collector 350 Retrieved January 9 2017 Alden Grant August 7 1997 Whiskeytown Strangers Almanac Rolling Stone Archived from the original on December 13 2002 Retrieved October 31 2016 Howe Sean May 2008 Reissues Spin 24 5 96 Retrieved December 21 2018 Whiskeytown Stranger s Almanac Uncut 109 The album still sounds like alt country s high tide Whiskeytown s Almanac Bolstered For Reissue Billboard com 2008 01 30 Retrieved 2008 02 04 a b c d e f g h Blackstock Peter 2008 Strangers Almanac Deluxe Edition booklet Whiskeytown Santa Monica California Geffen pp 6 13 B0009410 02 a b Currin Grayson 1997 Whiskeytown s Ryan Adams on Strangers Almanac Independent Weekly Retrieved 2008 03 12 a b Blackstock Peter 1997 Whiskeytown Falling down standing up Americana and Roots Music No Depression Retrieved 2011 01 03 Ryan Adams 28 December 2001 Archived from the original on 2001 12 28 Retrieved 7 June 2023 Menconi David 1997 Whiskeytown Has Songs To Spare Billboard BPI Communications published 1997 06 28 p 10 Currin Grayson 2008 03 12 Whiskeytown s Ryan Adams on Strangers Almanac Independent Weekly Retrieved 2011 01 09 a b 1997 Set Lists Answeringbell com Retrieved 2011 07 06 a b 1998 Set Lists Answeringbell com Retrieved 2011 07 06 Blackstock Peter 1997 Hello Stranger from Issue 9 No Depression Retrieved 2011 01 09 Deming Mark 1997 07 29 Strangers Almanac Whiskeytown AllMusic Retrieved 2011 07 06 a b Yahoo 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