Fotomaker - Fotomaker

Fotomaker - Fotomaker
S



Album Details

Title: Fotomaker
Artist: Fotomaker
Release Date: 1978
Re-Released On: 1/18/2005
Label: Wounded Bird Records, Rhino Atlantic
UPCs: 664140916524, 081227851262
Genre: Rock
Styles: Power Pop, Contemporary Pop/Rock
Moods: Amiable/Good-Natured, Cheerful, Fun, Playful, Rollicking
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Where Have You Been All My Life
  2. Can I Please Have Some More
  3. All There in Her Eyes
  4. Two Can Make It Work
  5. The Other Side
  6. Say the Same for You
  7. Plaything
  8. All These Years
  9. Pain
  10. Lose at Love

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2005CDWounded Bird Records9165
2005CDRhino Atlantic

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

Similar CDs

Album Review

Fotomaker had a pretty impressive pedigree. Guitarist/vocalist Wally Bryson came from power pop gods the Raspberries, and bassist Gene Cornish and drummer Dino Danelli were founding members of the Rascals. The other two bandmembers, guitarist/vocalist Lex Marchesi and keyboardist/vocalist Frankie Vinci, were no slouches either, as the two of them were responsible for most of the songwriting and singing on the band's fine 1978 debut. The record is very much in the power pop vein with walls of guitars, Beatlesque vocal harmonies, and big hooks. Unsurprisingly, they sound very much like the Raspberries, lacking that band's grandeur but replacing it with an easygoing charm. Their classic song, "Where Have You Been All My Life," is easily a match for the Raspberries' best. It is the kind of song that guitars were invented for, and will be going around your head for hours after you hear it. The rest of the album can't match it but there are some fine songs, like "Can I Please Have Some More," the very Todd Rundgren-sounding "Two Can Make It Work," the power ballad "All These Years," and "Pain." There is a subtle soft rock undercurrent to many of the tunes that may put off rockers who prefer a harder edge, but it actually gives the record some texture. Fotomaker may not be the lost classic that one might hope for, but it is a fine pop record with a fair amount of power and some very fine songs. ~ Tim Sendra, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Dino DanelliDrums, Group Member, Cover Design
Eddie KramerProducer
Ernst ThormahlenPhotography
FotomakerProducer
Frankie VinciFlute, Vocals, Keyboards, Group Member
Gene CornishBass, Group Member, Vocals
Lex MarchesiVocals, Guitar, Group Member
RockPhotography
Wally BrysonVocals, Guitar, Group Member