Create account Log in

Performance and Cocktails (Deluxe Edition)

[Edit]

Download links and information about Performance and Cocktails (Deluxe Edition) by The Stereophonics. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:38:05 minutes.

Artist: The Stereophonics
Release date: 1999
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:38:05
Buy on iTunes $11.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Roll Up and Shine 3:58
2. The Bartender and the Thief 2:54
3. Hurry Up and Wait 4:40
4. Pick a Part That's New 3:33
5. Just Looking 4:13
6. Half the Lies You Tell Ain't True 2:55
7. I Wouldn't Believe Your Radio 3:50
8. T-Shirt Sun Tan 4:04
9. Is Yesterday, Tomorrow, Today? 4:02
10. A Minute Longer 3:46
11. She Takes Her Clothes Off 3:55
12. Plastic California 4:30
13. I Stopped to Fill My Car Up 4:30
14. The Bartender and the Thief Live from Cardiff Cas 3:28
15. Sunny Afternoon 3:36
16. Positively 4th Street 3:51
17. Fiddlers Green 4:01
18. Angie 4:19
19. The Old Laughing Lady 4:42
20. Something In the Way 3:46
21. Half the Lies You Tell Ain't True (Live from Belfort Festival) 3:02
22. She Takes Her Clothes Off (Live at Hippodrome 1st March '99) 3:57
23. Roll Up and Shine (Live at Hippodrome 1st March '99) 3:47
24. Local Boy In the Photograph (Live) 4:15
25. Just Looking (Live at Hippodrome 1st March '99) 4:31

Details

[Edit]

In December 1998, the Stereophonics released the single "The Bartender and the Thief," which became an unexpected explosion on the charts, peaking at number three in the U.K. In March 1999, the band's sophomore effort, Performance and Cocktails, was released to impressive sales — it was reportedly outselling Blur's 13 when that album was released. A second single, "Just Looking," also peaked within the U.K. Top Ten, making the first half of 1999 a very unexpectedly busy time for the Stereophonics. Never a favorite to become a hugely successful Brit-pop band, their noisy, raw hard rock came into favor after the more produced and calculated sound of Brit-pop had become passe. Unfortunately, however, this disc isn't quite as consistent as the debut. Part of the reason why Word Gets Around was so appealing is that there was a sense of urgency that, on this release, seems to have disappeared. There are more ballads than before, and some of the rockers don't burn with the intensity that they did on the last album. This doesn't make Performance and Cocktails a bad album, though; fans will be very pleased that the Stereophonics have released another slab of indie-flavored hard rock. Some highlights include "T Shirt Sun Tan," the acoustic "She Takes Her Clothes Off," and the poppy "Pick a Part That's New." Japanese versions of this album include three live tracks, but the quality is mediocre and the performances are unspectacular, making this version of the release for hardcore fans only. [A Deluxe Edition, containing a second disc of unreleased live tracks and B-sides, was released in 2010.]