I'll Tell You What Man...

I'll Tell You What Man... is the 1988 debut album by Pittsburgh band the Clarks. The album was the band's first release, created while the musicians were still in college at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. The fast-paced song "Help Me Out" gained some airplay on Western Pennsylvania college radio stations, but at this point, the Clarks had yet to achieve success.

I'll Tell You What Man...
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 1988 (1988-06)
GenreRock
Length38:43
LabelKing Mouse Records
The Clarks chronology
I'll Tell You What Man...
(1988)
The Clarks
(1991)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [1]

Track listing

  1. "Hesitating"
  2. "Perfection Not Required"
  3. "In the End"
  4. "Let Me Die"
  5. "Pretty as You Please"
  6. "Help Me Out"
  7. "On My Way Back Home"
  8. "I'm the Only"
  9. "All That Much"
  10. "Hear It from You"
  11. "Today"

Personnel

  • Scott Blasey - lead vocals, acoustic & electric guitars
  • Rob James - electric guitar, vocals
  • Greg Joseph - bass guitar, vocals
  • Dave Minarik - drums, vocals
gollark: I was thinking about automation-type tools, but this sort of thing seems a decent idea too, so I might just do that.
gollark: That might make sense (restricted to the relevant folders, not losg and random stuff, at least).
gollark: What's a good way to manage all my services and stuff in a reasonably centralized fashion (yes, I know this is pretty vague)? I run many random webservices (some run in docker, they're all behind a reverse proxy (caddy)), having manually installed them, configured configuration, and in some cases set up service files for them, but I'm worried about the hassle restoring all this stuff would be in case of server failure and backing up all of `/` just seems inelegant. What I eventually want is to be able to, if my server or drives fail, redownload some scripts/configs/whatever, run some simple commands, load a backup of the relevant data and restart things.
gollark: <@404675960663703552> Random kind of late interjection: Ryzen can do (not the registered kind) ECC memory, though probably not on all boards. There's an ASRock one with IPMI and stuff which supports it.
gollark: Just buy 5 MacBooks, then, obviously.

References

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