Dusting ‘Em Off: Counting Crows – August and Everything After

By Megan Ritt on August 22nd, 2009 in Dusting 'Em Off, Features

Dusting ‘Em Off: Counting Crows – <i>August and Everything After</i>

I was only 10 years old when the Counting Crows released August and Everything After, but I can’t remember a time when I didn’t know every lyric. To me, it will always feel like an album that came out when I was in high school, even though a cursory glance at Wikipedia tells me that’s a lie. The Crows have had many releases in the years since this debut album dropped, but August and Everything After continues to be the band’s best, and most enduring, album.

Beginning with the classic “Round Here”, the album goes right for the heartstrings. “Omaha”, the next track, picks up the mood a bit and leads into “Mr. Jones”, the single that propelled the record to a 7 time certified Platinum. This is pure ’90s sentimentalism; just try cuing up that track and see if your life doesn’t flash backward 15 years. Singer Adam Duritz alternates between pitching his voice high and indulging in the smoky depths of his tone, making gray everyone’s favorite color. With an unmistakable acoustic guitar and references to the mysterious Maria, “Mr. Jones” is one of the definitive tracks of the decade, helping to establish the Crows as a force to be reckoned with.

Two tracks later, “Anna Begins” slows things down. Here, Duritz meditates on the theme of changing emotions, which comes up often in his lyrics. “Time and Time Again” comes next, with its quiet guitar and vocal rhythms weaving up and down into a beautiful melancholy tapestry. While the Crows clearly aren’t afraid to strike a dark note, listeners are never let down. My personal favorite, “Rain King”, jazzes up the album next, with a more upbeat take on the futility of love. A nod to Saul Bellow’s novel Henderson the Rain King, here the album’s protagonist is able to assert himself: “Don’t try to bleed me/I’ve been there before and I deserve a little more.”

We wind down again with fan favorites “Sullivan Street”, “Ghost Train”, and “Raining in Baltimore” before closing with the comparatively sassy “A Murder of One”. Every diehard Counting Crows fan definitely has his or her own favorite Crows’ song, but this fan is willing to bet that August and Everything After contains a disproportionate number of favorites. Every song on this album can break your heart, which makes it worth a listen if only for that reason. Maybe I will always think of this as a high school album because that’s how it feels: one song for every flavor of heartbreak. The Crows can feel a bit dark, true, but the band’s enduring appeal is the same as the occasional desire to wear sweaters in the summer. It’s healthy to remember how cold it can get.

Check Out:


August & Everything After – Deluxe Edition

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comments (5)

  • Dito here. There’s only a handful of albums among various of artists that I can listen and sing to front to back and this is one of them. It didn’t seem so to me when I first got the album so many years ago. But man, did that album ever so gently creep into my mind and kept my lips moving over the years. By far the best album by Counting Crows.

    Erik Hayes August 23, 2009 at 8:48 pm

  • @Devin “No” what? You can’t just say “no” and not explain yourself. Well I guess you can

    Luke Johnson August 22, 2009 at 7:31 pm

  • Wow…okay, so I was 20, not 10, when the album came out, so for me it pretty much reminds me of college and not high school (or elementary school in your case!) But yes, despite the fact that my musical tastes have changed dramatically in fifteen years, it remains one of my favorite albums. I hated “Mr. Jones” but somehow ended up getting the album anyway, and boy am I glad I did. For about five years it seems like I listened to it all the way through at least once a month or so. I recently dusted it off again (well, put it on my iPod) after no listening to it in years, and was pleased to find that I enjoy it now just as much as I did when I first listened to it (though I still hate “Mr. Jones” as much as I did as well.) I think it really stands the test of time pretty well.

    Xanthippas August 22, 2009 at 12:27 pm

  • Agree with you 100% on this one, Megan. August is in my all time top 5, no question. I would rank this one alongside Nevermind as the two most influential records of the 90s. Nevermindd encapsulates the punk side (ie grunge) of alternative rock, and August represents the folk/country influences of alt. rock during the same period.

    Luke Johnson August 22, 2009 at 11:58 am

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