Stop the Dominoes

Stop the Dominoes is an album by Mark Heard, released in 1981 on Home Sweet Home Records.

Stop the Dominoes
Studio album by
Released1981
RecordedPoiema Studios
Camarillo, California
The Gold Mine
Los Angeles, California
GenreFolk/rock
LabelHome Sweet Home
ProducerMark Heard
Mark Heard chronology
Fingerprint
(1980)
Stop the Dominoes
(1981)
Victims of the Age
(1982)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Track listing

All songs written by Mark Heard.

Side one

  1. "One Of the Dominoes" - 3:11
  2. "Stranded At the Station" - 3:54
  3. "You Could Lie To Me" - 2:55
  4. "One Night Stand" - 3:31
  5. "I'm Crying Again" - 4:43

Side two

  1. "Stuck In the Middle" - 3:13
  2. "Call Me the Fool" - 3:28
  3. "I'm In Chains" - 4:39
  4. "Lonely One" - 3:37
  5. "To See Your Face" - 4:26

The band

Additional musicians

Production notes

  • Produced, written and arranged by Mark Heard
  • Primary engineer: Jonathan David Brown
  • Additional engineers: Mark Heard, Janet Sue Heard
  • Recorded February-March, 1981 at Poiema Studios, Camarillo, California and at The Gold Mine, Los Angeles, California
  • Mixed by Mark Heard at The Gold Mine, Nashville, Tennessee
  • Album design by Mark Heard
  • Photographs by Janet Sue Heard
  • Graphics director: Dave de Coup Crank

"Special thanks to Jonathan, Tammy and Nathan for tacos and locos, to Larry and Randy for awesome rockolla, to Bill and Marsha for homestead and avocado fans, to Chris and Shanon for talking Southern, to Leo Fender for Stratification, to David and Christy for Monday nights, to Dave for A and B bath, stop and hypo."

"Love to the Circle of Cynics. to Jean-Daniel und Hansruedi in Zürich, to Freddie in London, to John and Prisca and the Huemoz folks, to Mita Perefit and Sandra, to the Russell Hall Stairwell Dreamers and to my folks. Additional Thanks to Bill Deaton."

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gollark: I blame some sort of weird interaction between insurance companies, regulation/the government, consumers of healthcare services, and the companies involved in healthcare.
gollark: The US healthcare system is just really quite broken and there is probably not some individual there who's just going "MWAHAHAHA, my plan to increase the price of healthcare has succeeded, and I could easily make everything reasonable but I won't because I'm evil!", or one person who could decide to just make some stuff free right now without introducing some huge issues. It's a systemic issue.
gollark: Yes, they do have considerations other than minimizing short-term COVID-19 deaths, but that is sensible because other things do matter.

References

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