Too Long in the Wasteland is the debut album by the American musician James McMurtry, released in 1989.[2][3] Its first single was "Painted by Numbers".[4] The album's title was inspired in part by his father's Texas ranch, which is named the Wasteland.[5]
| Too Long in the Wasteland | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1989 | |||
| Genre | Rock, country, folk | |||
| Label | Columbia Records[1] | |||
| Producer | John Mellencamp | |||
| James McMurtry chronology | ||||
| ||||
The album peaked at No. 125 on the Billboard 200.[6] McMurtry supported the album by playing some concert dates with Kinky Friedman, and touring with Nanci Griffith.[4][7]
The album was produced by John Mellencamp (with Michael Wanchic and Larry Crane), who reconnected with McMurtry during the development of Falling from Grace; the film was written by McMurtry's father, Larry McMurtry, who passed along his son's demo tape.[8][9][10] The songs were written in Archer City, Texas, and at Mellencamp's studio in Indiana.[11] McMurtry was backed by members of Mellencamp's band, as well as by David Grissom.[12][13]
The songs are not autobiographical. Many were written to rebut the tendency of popular country music to sentimentalize rural and small-town life.[14]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Austin American-Statesman | |
| Robert Christgau | B+[16] |
| MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide | |
| The Rolling Stone Album Guide | |
The Chicago Reader wrote that "McMurtry mainly acts as a dispassionate observer, content to sketch the outlines of a situation and leave its meaning, or his opinion of it, largely up to the listener to infer."[18] Robert Christgau thought that "like so many singer-songwriters and so many local-colorists, he tends to a soft fatalism, especially when he tries a big statement."[16] Texas Monthly likened McMurtry's "droll" singing to Mark Knopfler's.[19] The Edmonton Journal described the album as "Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska in technicolor."[20]
The New York Times called the album "a collection of 11 dour songs that portray the spiritually desolate lives of people living in America's heartland."[21] Trouser Press concluded that "McMurtry’s lyrics read as riveting poetry, but they’re that much more powerful when heard in the company of a modest hook and a heartland backbeat."[12] The Globe and Mail stated that McMurtry "writes with mordant humor about tiny places in a vast land where suspicion, prejudice and vague threats linger behind the Main Street facades, where choices made in haste are mulled over years later."[22] The Washington Post considered that "while his singing often takes on the dry, colorless, detached tone of the narrator, his songs are full of sharply drawn tales and three-dimensional characters."[23]
AllMusic noted that McMurtry "has a smooth, low voice that carries a Western twang from his life in Texas."[15] Salon deemed the album full of "catchy and harsh country-folk songs filled with tortured Southern souls failing at love, failing at life or just talking about it in front of the gas station on a country road."[24] The Rolling Stone Album Guide labeled "Terry" "a great, unsentimental lament for a mixed-up rehab bad boy."[17]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Painting by Numbers" | |
| 2. | "Terry" | |
| 3. | "Shining Eyes" | |
| 4. | "Outskirts" | |
| 5. | "Song for a Deckhand's Daughter" | |
| 6. | "I'm Not from Here" | |
| 7. | "Too Long in the Wasteland" | |
| 8. | "Crazy Wind" | |
| 9. | "Poor Lost Soul" | |
| 10. | "Angeline" | |
| 11. | "Talkin' at the Texaco" |
| |
|---|---|
| Studio albums |
|
| Related articles | |
| Authority control |
|
|---|