Superhero (Stephen Lynch album)

Superhero is a live album by singer/comedian Stephen Lynch. "Priest", "Mother's Day" and "Lullaby (The Divorce Song)" were originally recorded on his first CD A Little Bit Special. It was recorded live at four different comedy clubs in New York and New Jersey. Along with A Little Bit Special and The Craig Machine, the album has sold over 250,000 copies.

Superhero
Live album by
ReleasedJanuary 14, 2003
RecordedMarch 14–15, 20-21, 2002 at Rascal's Comedy Club, West Orange, New Jersey; Rascal's Comedy Club, Ocean Township, Ocean County, New Jersey; Governor's, Levittown, New York; and Gotham Comedy Club, New York City, New York
GenreComedy
Length49:38
LabelHaHa/What Are Records?
Stephen Lynch chronology
A Little Bit Special
(2000)
Superhero
(2003)
The Craig Machine
(2005)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

His second official album, Superhero, released in 2002, with What Are Records?, generally received better reviews than the first, partly because of strong audience response. The title track is 8 minutes and 58 seconds long, and largely consists of Lynch receiving the audience's suggestions for names for superheroes.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Stephen Lynch.

No.TitleLength
1."Talk to Me"3:20
2."Dr. Stephen"2:11
3."Priest" (Bonus live version)4:29
4."Country Love Song"2:12
5."Superhero"8:58
6."What If That Guy from Smashing Pumpkins Lost His Car Keys?"0:53
7."Mother's Day" (Bonus live version)1:07
8."Taxi Driver"1:28
9."For the Ladies"1:24
10."Grandfather"2:36
11."Bowling Song (Almighty Malachi, Professional Bowling God)"5:01
12."She Gotta Smile"2:58
13."Best Friends Song"2:03
14."D & D"2:47
15."Down to the Old Pub Instead"3:13
16."Lullaby (The Divorce Song)"8:21

A bonus live version of the song "Special Olympics" is included at about 5:40 into "Lullaby" (after a period of silence between the two songs), and was likely hidden there to avoid controversy over the title and content of the song.

Personnel

gollark: 100cm² = a 10cm by 10cm square.
gollark: A 100cm² drone will receive an *absolute maximum* of 20W of solar power.
gollark: So you need more weight and thus more motors.
gollark: So your drone is down half the time?
gollark: I think the main issue is just that there isn't enough sunlight to run motors constantly with current solar panels.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.