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Heartattack and Vine
1980 studio album by Tom Waits From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Heartattack and Vine is the seventh studio album by Tom Waits, released on September 9, 1980,[3] and his final album to be released on the Asylum label.
"On the Nickel" was recorded for the Ralph Waite film of the same name. It was used as the theme song for the 1985 "The Atlanta Child Murders" miniseries. "Heartattack and Vine" was later recorded by Screamin' Jay Hawkins. In 1993 this version was used without Waits' permission in a Levi's commercial, for which Waits took legal action and won a settlement.[4] Jean-Luc Godard used "Ruby's Arms" in his 1983 film First Name: Carmen. Bruce Springsteen performed "Jersey Girl" live (and was joined onstage by Waits to sing it on August 24, 1981), including it in his retrospective Live/1975–85.[5]
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Reception
Though critical of the album in many respects, including Waits' vocal delivery and the "morbid pathos" of the ballads, Stephen Holden of Rolling Stone wrote that "Tom Waits finds more beauty in the gutter than most people would find in the Garden of Eden," and referred to him as a "unique and lovable minor talent."[12]
The album was included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[15]
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Track listing
All songs written by Tom Waits.
Personnel
- Tom Waits – vocals, electric guitar, piano
- Bob Alcivar – string arrangement, orchestral arrangement, conductor
- Ronnie Barron – Hammond organ, piano
- Roland Bautista – electric guitar, twelve-string guitar
- Greg Cohen, Jim Hughart, Larry Taylor – bass guitar
- Victor Feldman – percussion, chimes, glockenspiel
- Plas Johnson – tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone
- Michael Lang – piano
- "Big John" Thomassie – drums
- Jerry Yester – orchestral arrangement, conductor
Charts
References
External links
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