Don't Cry Too Hard
Don't Cry Too Hard is the debut album by Canadian folk rock band Leslie Spit Treeo, released in 1990.[1] The album's primary single on radio was a cover of John Prine's "Angel from Montgomery", although the songs "Heat" and "The Sound" (which had previously appeared on the soundtrack to Bruce McDonald's film Roadkill) also garnered radio airplay.
| Don't Cry Too Hard | |
|---|---|
| Studio album by | |
| Released | 1990 |
| Label | CAPITOL RECORDS - EMI OF CANADA (C494856) |
| Producer | Chris Wardman |
Following the album's release, the band won the Juno Award for Most Promising Group at the Juno Awards of 1991.[2]
Helen Metella of the Edmonton Journal praised the album's "stark but sturdy songs", writing that they were made special by the "throaty, elastic and daring performance of [lead singer Laura] Hubert, who can switch from dreamy folk (Separate) to deeply ironic C&W (Talkin') as quickly as most buskers can whip out the hat".[3]
Track listing
- "Separate"
- "Like Yesterday"
- "Angel from Montgomery"
- "Moon at Noon"
- "UFO (Catch the Highway)"
- "One Thought Too Long"
- "Real"
- "Heat"
- "Dust"
- "Talkin'"
- "In the Round"
- "The Sound"
References
- "Leslie Spit Treeo, Don't Cry Too Hard". Toronto Star, September 29, 1990.
- "An evening at the Junos". The Province, March 4, 1991.
- Helen Metella, "Don't Cry Too Hard: The Leslie Spit Treeo". Edmonton Journal, September 30, 1990.