After Yesterday

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After Yesterday
After Yesterday cover
Studio album by John Gorka
Released October 20, 1998
Recorded April - June, 1998
Genre Folk
Singer-songwriter
Length 48:11
Label Red House Records
Producer John Jennings
Professional reviews
John Gorka chronology
Between Five and Seven
(1996)
After Yesterday
(1998)
The Company You Keep
(2001)

After Yesterday is the seventh studio album by folk singer-songwriter John Gorka. It was released on October 20, 1998 by Red House Records. The album marked Gorka's return to Red House, after five albums with Windham Hill/High Street Records. This was heralded as a homecoming-of-sorts as Red House had issued Gorka's debut, I Know in 1987. The album also marks several changes in the life of the artist himself. Themes of parenting and family life first heard here on songs such as, "When He Cries" and "Cypress Trees" have now become a regular feature of Gorka's subsequent albums.

The album was well received by both reviewers and folk music radio DJs. The album debuted at number two on the Folk Music Radio Airplay Chart for October and held the number one position in November of 1998. [7]

Contents

[edit] Track listing

All songs written by John Gorka

  1. "When the Ice Goes Out" – 4:51
  2. "Thorny Patch" – 5:22
  3. "Cypress Trees" – 3:12
  4. "Wisdom" – 5:34
  5. "Silvertown" – 4:31
  6. "January Floor" – 4:00
  7. "Amber Lee" – 4:30
  8. "After Yesterday" – 2:28
  9. "When He Cries" – 1:24
  10. "St. Caffeine" – 3:27
  11. "Zuly" – 4:46
  12. "Heroes" – 4:36

[edit] Songs

[edit] Heroes

"Heroes" was actually written by Gorka sometime in the 1980s. Gorka's copy of the lyrics were stolen, however, and the song was forgotten until Gorka relearned it from Hugh Blumenfeld a decade later. Blumenfeld tells this story:

"I learned 'Heroes' from John in Kerrville - I think it was 1987. He was camped next to my wife Andrea and me in an enclave that had been dubbed 'Little New York.' I forget when we first heard the song, whether it was there or earlier in NYC, but it was at Andrea's request that I learned it. The song was brand new and we both loved it as soon as we heard it, but Andrea was the one who wanted to sing it. So, one bright midmorning when things in the campgrounds are lazy and slow, John passed over his notebook and I copied out the words. Soon afterwards, the notebook - along with his guitar - was stolen from his car and never recovered.

Andrea and I sang it at home from time to time during the next ten years - our own private little treasure. It never occurred to either of us to ask John about it, until I opened for him at Godfreys in 1997. It was only then I learned that the song had been lost in the notebook and that he'd forgotten it long ago. So I was able to play it for him downstairs in the dressing room before the gig and write him out a copy of his own lyric." [8]

[edit] Credits

  • Linda Beauvais Artwork, Design
  • David Glasser Mastering
  • John Gorka Banjo, Guitar, Vocals, Producer
  • Peter Horvath Engineer, Original Production Assistance
  • John Jennings Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar, Percussion, Drums, Guitar (Electric), Keyboards, Producer, Bass (Upright)
  • Lucy Kaplansky Vocals
  • Jed Luhmann Engineer
  • Dean Magraw Guitar (Acoustic)
  • Michael Manring Bass
  • Ann Marsden Artwork, Design, Photography
  • Peter Ostroushko Fiddle, Mandolin
  • Andy Stochansky Percussion, Drums, Original Production Assistance
  • Tommy Tucker, Jr. Engineer
  • Tommy Tucker Engineer
  • Shane Washington Mixing

[edit] Notes and sources

  1. ^ Jim Bessman, "Singer/Songwriter Jim [sic] Gorka Returns to Red House", Billboard, 113:10, March 10, 2001
  2. ^ Daniel Gewertz, "Gorka's in the (Red) House again," The Boston Herald, February 5, 1999
  3. ^ Michael Parrish, "Recordings: After Yesterday, Dirty Linen, # 80, February-March 1999, p.47
  4. ^ Gene Stout, "Fatherhood breeds joy, inspiration for Gorka. (Whats Happening)", Seattle Post Intelligencer, April 2, 1999
  5. ^ Rich Warren, "Off the beaten track: After Yesterday", Sing Out!, Vol 43, # 3, Winter 1999, p. 120
  6. ^ Geoffery Himes, "John Gorka, 'After Yesterday', Red House", The Washington Post, November 27, 1998
  7. ^ Top Albums of October 1998 and November 1998 compiled by Richard Gillman from FolkDJ-L radio playlists.
  8. ^ Blumenfeld post on "The Gypsy Life" April 28, 2001

[edit] External links