Border Towns

Border Towns

Infobox Album |
Name = Border Towns
Type = Album
Artist = Preston Reed


Released = 1993
Recorded = Studio M, St. Paul, MN
Length = 34:33
Label = MCA Records
Producer = John Pena, Alex Acuna, Preston Reed
Reviews =

Last album = "Halfway Home"
1991
This album = "Border Towns"
1993
Next album = "Metal"
1995

"Border Towns" is guitarist Preston Reed's last recording for MCA Records. [ [http://www.prestonreed.com/recordings.html Preston Reed discography at his website.] Accessed on December 24, 2007.]

Track listing

(All songs by Preston Reed)
# "Jungle Highway" – 3:31
# "Border Towns" – 3:33
# "Sunrise Drive" – 4:31
# "Signal Path" – 2:31
# "Film Noir" – 3:29
# "Outskirts" – 3:11
# "Portofino" – 3:33
# "Big Fat Frets" – 3:17
# "Dead Cool" – 3:31
# "Hit the Ground Running" – 3:39

Personnel

*Preston Reed - guitar
*Alex Acuna - drums, percussion
*John Pena - Warwick bass and MIDI effects
*Otmaro Ruiz - synthesizer

Production notes

*Produced by John Pena, Alex Acuna and Preston Reed
*Engineered by John Scherf, Tom Mudge, Paul Baron and Brian Springer
*Mixed and mastered by Brian Springer

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Border towns in the United States with portmanteau names — A list of border towns in the United States with portmanteau names to indicate the border they are near:Border town portmanteaus* Calexico, California (California and Mexico) (Also see Mexicali) * Cal Nev Ari, Nevada (California, Nevada, and… …   Wikipedia

  • Border town — See also Bordertown .A border town is a town close to the boundary between two countries, states or regions. Usually the term implies that it is one of the things the town is most famous for. Border towns can have highly cosmopolitan communities …   Wikipedia

  • Border League — Infobox sports league logo= pixels=250px caption= sport=Rugby union founded=1901 teams=10 country=SCO champion=Selkirk RFC For the defunct baseball league, see Border League (baseball) The Border League, is the oldest established rugby union… …   Wikipedia

  • Border War — may refer to:*Wars involving border disputes: **Border War, also referred to as Bleeding Kansas, a series of violent events, involving Free Staters and pro slavery elements, that took place in the Kansas Territory and the western frontier towns… …   Wikipedia

  • Border Rivers (Australia) — The Border Rivers refers to a group of rivers and the associated region near the border between New South Wales and Queensland, states of Australia. They form the headwaters of the Darling River, draining the western side of the Great Dividing… …   Wikipedia

  • Border War (Kansas–Missouri rivalry) — The Border War (officially branded as the M I Bank Border Showdown for sponsorship reasons) is the name of an intense rivalry between the University of Missouri and University of Kansas athletic teams, the Missouri Tigers and the Kansas Jayhawks …   Wikipedia

  • Border Reivers (game) — Infobox Game subject name=Border Reivers image link= image caption= Three player game in progress designer=Jackson Pope publisher=Reiver Games players=2 to 4 ages= 12 and up setup time= 5 ndash;10 minutes playing time= 30 ndash;90 minutes… …   Wikipedia

  • Border outpost — For other uses, see Outpost. A border outpost[1], border out post[2], border observation post[3] or BOP[4][5] is an outpost maintained by a sovereign state on its border, usually one of a series placed at regular intervals, to watch over and… …   Wikipedia

  • Border pipes — The border pipes are a musical instrument that is a close cousin of the Great Highland Bagpipe. It is commonly confused with the Scottish smallpipe, although it is a quite different and much older instrument. The name, which is modern, comes from …   Wikipedia

  • Border Ruffian — In the decade leading up to the American Civil War, pro slavery activists infiltrated Kansas Territory from the neighboring slave state of Missouri. To abolitionists and other Free Staters, who desired Kansas to be admitted to the Union as a free …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”