Dream Harder

Dream Harder
Studio album by
Released24 May 1993[1]
RecordedNew York City
GenreRock
Length43:33
LabelGeffen, Puck
ProducerMike Scott, Bill Price
The Waterboys chronology
Room to Roam
(1990)
Dream Harder
(1993)
The Live Adventures of the Waterboys
(2000)

Dream Harder is the sixth studio album by the Waterboys, released by Geffen Records on 24 May 1993. Led by Scottish singer-songwriter-instrumentalist Mike Scott, the album features none of the earlier UK-based band members and instead finds Scott backed by American session musicians.[2] It was the last Waterboys album before Scott spent seven years pursuing a formal solo career, with Bring 'Em All In (1995) and Still Burning (1997). The album reached position 171 on the Billboard Top 200 charts, surpassing the previous Waterboys album Room to Roam, in spite of a less-than-enthusiastic response from critics to the album's sound.[3]

The album art was provided by the photography of Michael Halsband and John Hardin and the painting of Pal Shazar, under the direction of Frank Olinsky and Tom Zutaut.

Dream Harder was a return to a rock, or even hard rock, sound after the traditional Celtic-influenced preceding two albums. It did, however, continue the Waterboys' tradition of arranging a William Butler Yeats poem, in this case "Love And Death". "The Return of Pan" is the Waterboys' second ode to the Greek deity, and the album contains a number of references to the romantic Neopaganism of Dion Fortune and the mystical Christianity of C. S. Lewis, as well as a tribute to guitarist Jimi Hendrix.

  1. ^ "New Releases: Albums". Music Week. 22 May 1993. p. 21. ISSN 0265-1548.
  2. ^ "Mike Scott bio". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 October 2005.
  3. ^ "Dream Harder review". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 October 2005.