Here are your answers:
Rhett Miller - Mythologies (1988)
Murry Hammond - It's a Twelve-String World (1991)
Also don't forget Murry's The Watering Wheel (1988), and of course I Don't Know Where I'm Going But I'm On My Way (2008)
Sleepy Heroes - Under the Radio Sun (1991)
The Ranchero Brothers - Too Far To Demo
(1996) It's a Rhett & Murry four-track, acoustic demo with most of
what became TFTC in '97, plus a few Ranchero chestnuts. Also notable
for including an early version of Rhett's solo cut "Fireflies." Copies
of TFTD surface now and then various sites.
The Rancheros recorded a proper, never-titled, studio album in 2000, but that
project was shelved prior to its release. And while several Rancheros
songs have made their re-recorded way onto Old 97’s albums, only three cuts from those
aborted Ranchero sessions, "In The Satellite Rides A Star," “Sweet Thing Pine Bluff,” and “I’d Be Lonesome”
(a Robbie Fulks cover) have been released, and then only on three
limited-edition compilation albums.
Here's
what Murry wrote about the album in a post to old97s.com back in May of
2000, and I'm sure you'll recognize some titles. (Also, the "My Two
Feet" here is Murry's original version, the chorus of which survives
with Rhett's new verses on the cut from BIOG):
Basically it will be acoustic guitar, bass and our two vocals like we
do live, with an occasional overdub-for-fun such as old-time style
banjo on one song, spooky steel guitar noises on others. Some of the
songs are a bit psychedelic by nature, not too much though, in Beatle
terms more "I'm Only Sleeping" than "Tomorrow Never Knows", if you get
my drift. It will be Rancheros all the way. Song titles are:
Black-Eyed Susan
Blinding Sheets of Rain
Champaign Illinois
Daybed
Eight More Miles To Louisville
Hobo Song
I'd Be Lonesome
In The Satellite Rides A Star
In The Shadow of Clinch Mountain
|
Iron Road
Muddy Rio Grande
My Two Feet
Sweet Thing Pine Bluff
Valium Waltz
Visiting Hours
The Wedding Place
Won't Be Home No More
No Longer In Love
|
Still not sure how many to put on the record.
Maybe we'll throw them all on there - I don't know - 18 song records
can get pretty long. We'll see.
But
when all was said and done, Rhett & Murry faced a reluctant
Elektra, which was leery of a possible 2001 RB's release conflicting with Satellite Rides,
while Murry was concerned that many of the finished tracks lacked
warmth, and wanted to rerecord them on lower-fi, vintage equipment,
much as he did his new album. Still, the three cuts out there are
magical, and it's a shame the rest of them have done nothing but sit in a can for the past eight
years.
Sorry for the length, but hope this helps!
Cheers,
frank