
all the pain money can by (fastball) - awsome. i had looked everywhere for this as they are no longer distibuted and you had a new one!!!! thank you.
The best of FASTBALL - This is the best album ever for Fastball. Wish the newer one is better but it wasn t.
Nice ear candy !!!! - In a world where most artists assume they have to produce noisy, discordant, and non-melodic fodder for the equally beguilled public these guys are a nice retreat. Just plain good ole rock that you can play all the way thru without torturing yourself by trying to listen to it 10 times before you get it like some of the crud being passed off as art these days. (yes, I do hate emo and death/thrash metal)This is the only album of theirs that I ve listened to and looking forward to grabbing the rest of their work.
a really fun album - I was about 10 or 11 when this album came out and I was among the millions who loved the song The Way. I bought the cd and, for a while, they were my favorite band. But years past and my musical tastes drifted toward the hardcore/ metal/ death metal spectrum. But, recently, I dug this old cd out and put it in, on a whim. I had forgotten what a great band Fastball was (and still is). This album is so different and so upbeat compared to what I now listen to that I am just constantly drawn to it. The songs are simple, yet really impressive. Tony and Miles have two really distinct, good voices and the music itself puts you into a good mood. I really like this album and I m really glad to have unearthed it after all of this time.
A Warm Fuzzy Feeling, indeed - FAST BALL threw me a curve. I didn t expect this and I m a better listener for hearing their CD. Anyone who likes power pop will find the hooks a plenty on this release. That s one of the places I like to visit from BIG STAR to the UNCLE DEVIL SHOW, I eat this stuff up. Like the title one of NICK LOWE s early records: Pure Pop for Now People. It s almost as if PAUL MACARTNEY were in the studio saying, not bad fellows, not bad at all. It s fresh yet familiar all at once, an absolute home run. THE WAY which opens the CD, is a stone c old smash. An instant classic. The most modern sound on the disc. Sort of like the best moments from a great, lost SUGAR RAY single. A song so summery good you ll be playing it at your next BBQ and have folks asking you Who is that band? It s that good, the kind of song John Cusack s character in Hi Fidelity would play in his record shop in Chicago. Wonderful harmonies, evoking British Invasion images of Beatles.FIRE ESCAPE received considerable airplay on WXRT-FM (Chicago s Finest Rock) at the turn of the century, and while not my personal favorite, is certainly the reason these popsters made a little splash during the Y2K era.I feel that things really pick up with tracks 6-12, where there is a half dozen+, cheerful pop moments, so well crafted, you ll wonder where these guys came from, have been...and why they weren t discovery by more rock hounds.WARM FUZZY FEELING, hits one out of the park. This track could easily have come off a vintage SMITHEERNS LP.SLOW DRAG Has the craftsmanship of the brothers FINN in CROWDED HOUSE or the woefully underrated REMBRANTS.GOOD OLD DAYS, like The KINKS, has a snappy beat, with a punched up horn section reminiscent of BS&T or later day GRASS ROOTS. Me likes the Old Days, Good Times I Remember. You know, the horny sounds of CHICAGO. CHARLIE THE METHODONE MAN, OUT OF MY HEAD. Get out your Bic lighter as CHEAP TRICK fans re-unite, Z NUFF said.DAMAGED GOODS, BADFINGER anyone? Listen for the ELVIS COSTELLO-styled vocal presentation on this one.NOWHERE ROAD reminds me of AL Kooper s immortal keyboard play circa Dylan s LIKE A ROLLING STONE, meets `BALLAD OF JOHN & YOKO, before evolving into a salute to THE WHO s I CAN SEE FOR MILES. As Keith Moon once said: If you want to play load, hit the drums hard.In the end FASTBALL sounds the most like FASTBALL, and that s a good thing.FASTBALL touches them all and left me with a warm fuzzy feeling. You should try FASTBALLS pitch too.