Here Come The Miracles
Release Date: 2001
Album Notes:
Released in the 2001. The first double album Steve Wynn ever released.
The first of the "Desert Trilogy" discs recorded in Tucson, Arizona.
The critiques picked up on this release and hailed it as the best Steve Wynn has ever recorded.
Here Come The Miracles won the price of best "Rock Alternative" album of 2001, at the annual AFIM Indie Awards.
Track Listing
Track Listing
Album Press
Independant Underground Sound
"It's a mixture of the best of Americana and the best shag of your life. Yeah, that good, man"moreposted:
London Times
"Songwriterly maturity merges with psychedelic power surges. But be warned: buy this record and prepare for an expensive outlay on Wynn's back catalogue."moreposted:
Time Out NY
"...Wynn tears through the songs with great purpose and passion. He's always been a moody son-of-a-bitch but on this record he reaches moments of wisdom, introspection and spiritual enlightenment unexplored on his past albums. ...The songs are littered with grim scenes of self-destruction, booze, pills, fast cars, sad characters and other 'assorted miseries,' but the album concludes with a hopefulmoreposted:
San Francisco Bay Guardian
"...'Here Come The Miracles,' the masterful new double album from ex-Dream yndicate leader Steve Wynn...gives us an L.A. soaked with grime, skank, and growl. Wynn's Los Angeles is a Byrds- and X-haunted mecca for squinting, imperfect souls who are buying time but, as Wynn sings on 'Death Valley Rain,' 'got no place to put it' and who have themoreposted:
Village Voice
"Mr. Wynn, who's been bringing his brainy, pop-fueled songcraft to the minimasses since his days in the Paisley Underground with Dream Syndicate, has a groovy new album out, 'Here Come the Miracles.'"moreposted:
Time Out London
"A work of grit and grind and pith and pop, pretty jangle and beauty bomp, shifting structure and melodic suss. Great songs, gloriously delivered. This is likely Wynn's masterpiece.... just get this, get this, get this."moreposted:
Q
"...Wynn's sprawling, 2-disc 'Here Comes The Miracles' may well be his finest, most consistent and convincing work ever." - Iowa City Press Citizen "He's rarely sounded more driven... dusting off his best Lou Reed/Neil Young/Bob Mould moves, it's an airtight collection of jagged guitar manoeuvres..."moreposted:
Chicago Sun-Time
"...his strongest album in a decade..."moreposted:
Chicago Tribune
"Sounding alternately combative and remorseful, Wynn flavors his tales with organ-fueled garage rock, sweet Brill Building pop, slinky R&B grooves, Neil Young crunch, Lou Reed noise and Dylan-esque brooding. Whatever the style, though, Wynn approaches it with the energetic abandon of his first musical love."moreposted:
Chicago Tribune
"...an impressively consistent 2-CD set that ranks with his very best. Rather than forge new ground, Wynn casts a wide-angle spotlight on his considerable skills, from his tuneful, classically resonant songwriting to his thoughtful arranging to his multifaceted guitar playing. ...'Here Come the Miracles' proves that Wynn's a genuine rock renaissance man."moreposted:
Billboard
"...an ambitious new entry in his discography."moreposted:
Boston Phoenix
"It's his most assured work in years, a dazzling display of inspiration, intent, and execution that, from the opening garage-fuzz guitar notes of the title track, recalls the nocturnal grandeur of Dream Syndicate's 1982 landmark LP, 'The Days of Wine and Roses.'"moreposted:
- Wynn fires back with both barrels blazing....Wynn's nineteen-song cycle of
a Southern California suspended between the millennium and the apocalypse
infuses his literary aspirations with rock 'n' roll smarts, as if he's
fronting Raymond Chandler's supercharged garage band.posted:
- He's rarely sounded more driven... dusting off his best Lou Reed/Neil
Young/Bob Mould moves, it's an airtight collection of jagged guitar
manoeuvres...moreposted:
Billboard
...an ambitious new entry in his discography.posted:
Boston Phoenix
It's his most assured work in years, a dazzling display of inspiration,
intent, and execution that, from the opening garage-fuzz guitar notes of the
title track, recalls the nocturnal grandeur of Dream Syndicate's 1982
landmark LP, 'The Days of Wine and Roses.'posted:
Chicago Sun Times
...his strongest album in a decade...posted:
Chicago Tribune
Sounding alternately combative and remorseful, Wynn flavors his tales with
organ-fueled garage rock, sweet Brill Building pop, slinky R&B grooves, Neil
Young crunch, Lou Reed noise and Dylan-esque brooding. Whatever the style,
though, Wynn approaches it with the energetic abandon of his first musical
love.posted:
San Francisco Bay Guardian
...'Here Come The Miracles,' the masterful new double album from ex-Dream
Syndicate leader Steve Wynn...gives us an L.A. soaked with grime, skank, and
growl. Wynn's Los Angeles is a Byrds- and X-haunted mecca for squinting,
imperfect souls who are buying time but, as Wynn sings on 'Death Valley
Rain,' 'got no place to put it' and who have the 'Crawling Misanthropic
Blues' because they want to be free but can't be.posted:
Magnet
...a double-CD masterpiece.posted:
Amplifier
From the fuzz-drenched opening chords of the title track, it is apparent
that Steve Wynn has come to this new album with a fully rocked arsenal. ?it
may also stand as his most viscerally satisfying. ?a soundtrack that
alternately blisters and smolders.posted:
Village Voice
Mr. Wynn, who's been bringing his brainy, pop-fueled songcraft to the mini
masses since his days in the Paisley Underground with Dream Syndicate, has a
groovy new album out, 'Here Come the Miracles.'posted:
Time Out London
A work of grit and grind and pith and pop, pretty jangle and beauty bomp,
shifting structure and melodic suss. Great songs, gloriously delivered.
This is likely Wynn's masterpiece.... just get this, get this, get this.posted:
Philadelphia City
The wide-ranging double CD... surges and sputters like a rattletrap
speeding through the desert, praying for one more gas station past the last
chance. ...it's an exhilarating ride. Just close your eyes, throw your head
back and smell the dust as it whips through your hair.posted:
Los Angeles Times
The result is a freewheeling yet self-assured balance of Wynn's own voice
and the influences long associated with him - the darkness of the Velvet
Underground, the spaciousness of Neil Young and the oblique introspection of
Bob Dylan.posted:
Chicago Tribune
...an impressively consistent 2-CD set that ranks with his very best.
Rather than forge new ground, Wynn casts a wide-angle spotlight on his
considerable skills, from his tuneful, classically resonant songwriting to
his thoughtful arranging to his multifaceted guitar playing. ...'Here Come
the Miracles' proves that Wynn's a genuine rock renaissance man.posted:
Phoenix New Times
The culmination of four decades of music making, "Miracles"is a grand,
sumptuous statement, simultaneously forward looking and anchored by
nostalgia. It is, quite simply, the best album of the year... a sprawling,
career-defining, double-disc opus...posted:
- 'Miracles' is a nineteen-song bundle of what you've been missing: snarling
prairie-wolf guitars circling Wynn's cutting yowl in the title bullet;
roaming-dog blues like 'Sunset to the Sea' that sound like Townes Van Zandt
hitchhiking with Crazy Horse.....If there is any justice left in rock,
"Miracles"will be [Wynn's] big payback.posted:
Cleveland Free Times
"The best record of his solo career."moreposted:
NY Rock
"The short space here can't really give it the credit it's due, but if you buy one CD this year, for God's sake, make it this one."moreposted:
NY Press
"Wynn has never abandoned the Neil Young influence, but this album easily smokes any Young offering since Freedom...this ambitious offering is 'atmospheric' enough to keep rebounding in my head all summer long."moreposted:
NYRock.com
"The maturity and complexity of the songwriting and the arrangements show Wynn as a rare performer who has aged like a fine wine. ...if you buy just one CD this year, for God's sake, make it this one."moreposted:
Sound & Vision
"...this ambitious two-disc set -- with all the expected Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, and Neil Young influences intact -- is probably his most consistent effort, thanks to a sympathetic band and exceptionally sharp songwriting."moreposted:
Philadelphia City Paper
"The wide-ranging double CD... surges and sputters like a rattletrap speeding through the desert, praying for one more gas station past the last chance. ...it's an exhilarating ride. Just close your eyes, throw your head back and smell the dust as it whips through your hair."moreposted:
Pulse of the Twin Cities
"Wynn's latest, the double CD 'Here Come the Miracles' (Down There Records), may be the finest of his reasonably prolific solo career. Shades of Dylan and Reed still haunt his voice, but his songwriting takes an outright catchy, hook-filled edge."moreposted:
Cincinnati CityBeat
"...perhaps the greatest neo-psychedelic record in eons, 'Here Come the Miracles' [is] a work of fuzzed-out beauty..." - Minneapolis City Pages "...'Miracles' is a sprawling, squalling AltRock epic, at once a validation of everything Wynn has attempted in his solo career, as well as an expansion upomoreposted:
Columbus Alive
"The music... is forward-thinking. Wynn claims this was the most fun he ever had making a record, and it shows. The songwriting and production quirks are the most ambitious of his career." - Columbus Dispatch "'Here Comes the Miracles' is an album that not every artist has in them. Thankfully Wynn did."moreposted:
Rolling Stone
"'Miracles' is a nineteen-song bundle of what you've been missing: snarling prairie-wolf guitars circling Wynn's cutting yowl in the title bullet; roaming-dog blues like 'Sunset to the Sea' that sound like Townes Van Zandt hitchhiking with Crazy Horse.....If there is any justice left in rock, Miracles will be (Wynn's) big payback"moreposted:
- ...Here Come The Miracles is possibly the best thing he's done since The Days Of Wine And Roses....In a just world, the anthemic "There Will Come A Day" would be a hit single...more
posted: 2002-00-00
- Steve Wynn's latest work, a double disc that will be released soon, has a gorgeous hook-drenched and jangly psych pop tune, "Shades Of Blue." The rest of the 18 songs represent an upbeat and fresh evolution on Steve's Paisley Underground heritage. Few indie pop veterans are capable of this type of talent surge.
posted: 2001-05-00
- It is One Man's California Hell, and it's there's never been a window into those regions that rang true quite like Here Come The Miracles does.more
posted:
- I don't remember an album of the ex-Dream Syndicate frontman with so much fine psychedelia in it.more
posted:
- However, with the release of his double album, Here Come the Miracles, Wynn's reach has finally attained the heights hinted at by his seminal Dream Syndicate slab Days of Wine and Roses.
B Y C H R I S P A R K E Rmoreposted:
- Here Come the Miracles is a brilliant summation of the spirit that has driven Wynn's career, without question one of the best albums of 2001, and, above all, further evidence of the strange power music can hold over us.more
posted: 2002-01-17
- 1. Steve Wynn - Here Come The Miracles
The former Dream Syndicate frontman fired on all cylinders with this one - Shake It Up's Album Of The Year. Here Come The Miracles was a bold and brazen rock and roll journey that covered more territory than Wynn ever has. Backed by an exceptional band, Wynn takes elements of early Tom Waits and Neil Young sounds and created something equally powerful and lasting on this sprawling 2-CD set.
posted:
Toronto Eye
1. Steve Wynn, Here Come the Miracles (Down There): For my money, America's
greatest rock 'n' roller -- like having Dream Syndicate, Neil, Lou and Bob D.
all in one package. Horseshoe gig was gravity-defying, too. posted:
Biloxi Sun-Hearld
"Here Come the Miracles," Steve Wynn (Blue Rose) - This double CD is the best psychedelic album in years posted:
Sound & Vision
#8--Journeyman songsmith delivers a two-disc career highposted:
Boston Herald
Wynn's
disc has better guitars; tunes don't quite match up.
moreposted:
Magnet
When the flash flood of scotch and gasoline finally
subsides, a career-defining double album blossoms like a century plant in the
desert sand.moreposted:
- Top 10 lists in 2001 : MAGNET,TORONTO EYE,PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER,BILOXI, SUN-HERALD,BOSTON HERALD,ROLLING STONE ONLINE,ROLLING STONE (Germany),SOUND AND VISION,TOAST,GADFLY, SCRAMmore
posted:
Philadelphia Enquirer
Steve Wynn's 'Miracles' is an unexpected gift
moreposted:
London Times
Songwriterly maturity merges with psychedelic power surges. But be
warned: buy this record and prepare for an expensive outlay on Wynn's back
catalogue.posted:
NY Press
Wynn has never abandoned the Neil Young influence, but this album easily
smokes any Young offering since Freedom...this ambitious offering is
'atmospheric' enough to keep rebounding in my head all summer long.posted:
Cleveland Free Times
The best record of his solo career.posted:
- The maturity and complexity of the songwriting and the arrangements show
Wynn as a rare performer who has aged like a fine wine. ...if you buy just
one CD this year, for God's sake, make it this one.posted:
Sound & Vision
...this ambitious two-disc set -- with all the expected Bob Dylan, Lou
Reed, and Neil Young influences intact -- is probably his most consistent
effort, thanks to a sympathetic band and exceptionally sharp songwriting.posted:
Columbus Alive
'Here Comes the Miracles' is an album that not every artist has in them.
Thankfully Wynn did.posted:
Iowa City Press Citizen
..Wynn's sprawling, 2-disc 'Here Comes The Miracles' may well be his
finest, most consistent and convincing work ever.posted:
Pulse of the Twin Cities
Wynn's latest, the double CD 'Here Come the Miracles' (Down There Records),
may be the finest of his reasonably prolific solo career. Shades of Dylan
and Reed still haunt his voice, but his songwriting takes an outright
catchy, hook-filled edge.posted:
Toronto Eye
...he came away with the record of his career. "Here Come The Miracles" is
one of those rare records that grows more compelling with each run-through
of its 19 songs.posted:
Time Out NY
...Wynn tears through the songs with great purpose and passion. He's always
been a moody son-of-a-bitch but on this record he reaches moments of wisdom,
introspection and spiritual enlightenment unexplored on his past albums.
...The songs are littered with grim scenes of self-destruction, booze,
pills, fast cars, sad characters and other 'assorted miseries,' but the
album concludes with a hopeful message on the glorious closing track, the
spiritual 'There Will Come a Day.'posted:
Cincinnati City Beat
...'Miracles' is a sprawling, squalling AltRock epic, at once a validation
of everything Wynn has attempted in his solo career, as well as an expansion
upon it.posted:
Minneapolis City Pages
...perhaps the greatest neo-psychedelic record in eons, 'Here Come the
Miracles' [is] a work of fuzzed-out beauty...posted:
Columbus Dispatch
The music... is forward-thinking. Wynn claims this was the most fun he ever
had making a record, and it shows. The songwriting and production quirks are
the most ambitious of his career.posted:
- Steve has made his best album since Kerosene Manmore
posted:
- Wynn Är en fin sånglyriker, med pregnanta betraktelser om ett liv som ofta Är på vÄg åt ett annat håll. more
posted: 2001-03-16