Down Here is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Tracy Bonham, released on April 18, 2000, through Island Records. The album was recorded between March 1998 and December 1999 by Bonham and producers Mitchell Froom, Tchad Blake, Mark Endert and Don Gilmore. The album was supposed to be released in October 1998 under the title Trail of a Dust Devil, but was delayed until the spring of 2000, as Island was going through a major restructuring.
Down Here received generally positive reviews from critics. However, the album struggled to find an audience in a musical climate dominated by nu metal, and it experienced virtually no radio airplay. Down Here was Bonham's final album for Island.
Background and recording
In 1996, Tracy Bonham released her gold-selling debut album The Burdens of Being Upright. Following several tours in support of the album, Bonham began recording a follow-up to the album in March 1998, at the Magic Shop in New York City with producers Mitchell Froom and Tchad Blake. Bonham said that she chose to work with them "for their credibility and for the way they make records 'sound.' " The recording sessions with Froom and Blake, which were completed by May 1998, were worked on with the assistance of bassist Sebastian Steinberg and drummers Pete Thomas and Steve Slingeneyer. After recording concluded, Bonham embarked on a warm-up tour for the album—then known as Trail of a Dust Devil—and in anticipation of its planned October 1998 release.
Bonham's record label, Island Records, was anxious about her working with Froom and Blake as both of them "were not known as hitmakers". Although the label did not interfere with its recording (due to Froom's refusal to allow any of its personnel into the studio), they were able to pressure Bonham into writing more commercial songs for the album. Frustrated, Bonham relocated from Boston to New York City, where she wrote "Behind Every Good Woman". after which the album was delayed—for a final time—to the spring of 2000.
| rev2 = The Encyclopedia of Popular Music
| rev2score =
| rev3 = Entertainment Weekly
| rev3score = A−
| rev4 = PopMatters
| rev4score = 7.5/10
| rev5 = Spin
| rev5score = 5/10
| rev6 = Wall of Sound
| rev6score = 79/100
Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic wrote: "Though it occasionally sounds a little out of time -- it's a record that would have made more sense in 1997 than in 2000 -- Down Here is a record that reveals much of its strengths only with repeated listens, and that's part of the problem. Apart from the hardcore fans that have stuck with her for five years, not many people will give it a chance. If they do, they'll find that it's a smart, assured, and distinctive second effort that is a quantum leap past her debut." The Los Angeles Times thought that the album "collects music that is even richer and more distinctive" than the debut.
Track listing
Personnel
Personnel per liner notes.
- Tracy Bonham - bass, guitar, violin, Hammond organ, vocals
- Gregg Arreguin - guitar
- Steve Berlin - baritone saxophone
- Mitchell Froom - organ, piano, drum loop, sounds, optigan, Minimoog
- Don Gilmore - bass, production
- Dan Rothchild - bass
- Andrew Sherman - clavinet, Wurlitzer
- Steve Slingeneyer - percussion, drums, marimba
- Sebastian Steinberg - bass, upright bass
- Pete Thomas - drums
- Josh Freese - drums
Production
- Producers: Tracy Bonham, Tchad Blake, Mitchell Froom, Mark Endert, Don Gilmore
- Engineer: Tchad Blake
- Assistants: Doug Boehm, David Bryant, Robert Carranza, Juan Garcia, Evan Hollander, S. "Husky" Hoskulds, James Murray
- Mixing: Tchad Blake, Mark Endert, Tom Lord
- String arrangements: Tracy Bonham
- Pitch adjustment: Tracy Bonham
- Design: Ondine Bue, Steve Slingeneyer
- Art direction: Ondine Bue, Steve Slingeneyer
- Photography: Valerie Phillips, Norman Jean Roy
