Bottle Rocket is one of the albums from Christian rock band Guardian. The album was released on August 5, 1997 and was produced by Steve Taylor.
Bottle Rocket | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | August 5, 1997 | |||
Genre | Christian rock | |||
Length | 50:29 | |||
Label | Word | |||
Producer | Steve Taylor | |||
Guardian chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
The Phantom Tollbooth | (not rated)[2] |
This album delved deeper into the alternative and grunge genre the band explored in their previous album.
Track listing
edit- "Are We Feeling Comfortable Yet?" (Rowe, Taylor) - 3:15
- "Bottle Rocket" (Bach, Palacios, Rowe, Taylor) - 3:43
- "Coffee Can" (Palacios, Taylor) - 3:44
- "Revelation" (Bach, Rowe) - 3:46
- "What Does It Take?" (Rowe, Taylor) - 4:09
- "Babble On" (Palacios, Rowe, Taylor) - 4:26
- "Blue Light Special" (Bach, Palacios, Taylor) - 2:43
- "Break Me Down" (Palacios) - 3:40
- "The Water Is Fine" (Palacios, Taylor) - 2:45
- "My Queen Esther" (Palacios) - 3:47
- "Hell to Pay" (Palacios, Taylor) - 3:22
- "Fear the Auctioneer" (Palacios, Taylor) - 2:56
- "Harder Than It Seems" (Rowe, Taylor) - 4:15
- "Salvation" (Bach, Palacios, Rowe) - 3:58
Song Meanings
edit- "Coffee Can" was written by guitarist Tony Palacios and was inspired by a recurring dream his mother had shortly before she died of cancer. In the dream she was trying to fly to heaven on a coffee can, but couldn't get it more than a foot or two off the ground. "The dream image became a metaphor for the futility of trusting in one's own strength, and consequently a metaphor of the deep need for grace".[3]
- "My Queen Esther" and "What Does It Take" deal with the easing of burdens at the foot of the cross for "those who labor and are heavy laden."[3]
- The title cut, "Bottle Rocket," (a 90's version of "This Little Light of Mine") is an encouragement to live out your faith in view of the world.[3]
Personnel
editGuardian
- Jamie Rowe – vocals
- Tony Palacios – guitars, vocals
- David Bach – bass, vocals
- Karl Ney – drums
Guest musicians
- John Mark Painter – theremin (2), strings (2), Mellotron (2, 10, 11), keyboards (12)
- Eric Darken – percussion
- Russ Long – tambourine (6)
- Shane Boyd – poetic recitation (7)
Production
edit- Steve Taylor – producer
- Jim Chaffee – executive producer, A&R direction
- Russ Long – engineer, mixing
- Steve Bishir – additional engineer
- Wade Jaynes – additional engineer
- David Schober – additional engineer
- Chris Grainger – recording assistant, mix assistant (5, 9, 14)
- Rich Hanson – recording assistant
- Dave Latto – recording assistant
- Amanda Sears – recording assistant
- Jason Van Pelt – recording assistant
- Kenton Kelsey – mix assistant (1-4, 6-8, 10-12)
- Bob Ludwig – mastering
- Buddy Jackson – art direction
- Christine Knubel – design
- Matthew Barnes – photography
- Lord & Michaels Inc. – management
Studios
- Recorded at Quad Studios and The Carport (Nashville, Tennessee).
- Mixed at Sound Kitchen (Franklin, Tennessee) and The Carport.
- Mastered at Gateway Mastering (Portland, Maine).
References
edit- ^ Bottle Rocket at AllMusic
- ^ "Guardian's Bottle Rocket - the Phantom Tollbooth".
- ^ a b c Guardian. "Guardian".