
Famous Lunch
Chris Ackerâs latest collection of songs, Famous Lunch, is in his words, a âgrowing pains album.â When writing the record, the New Orleans' based folk musician found himself hunting for a voice that wasnât just an imitation of the one heâd been using on the last 30 songs heâd made. âAt the same time, I worked hard to find a certain voice for myself over the previous 3 records and I didnât want to abandon that.â While the album finds him continuing to transcribe lifeâs fleeting and provocative banalities with refreshing grace, the songs on Famous Lunch are intentionally more absurd, stylizing his lyricism as both poetic and disarming simultaneouslyâ commencing with âSh*t Surpriseââan earworm with a vernacular that stays true to its title. Inspired by George Saunders and Sasha Pearl (and wanting to make a song that sounds like Eagles saying the word âsh*tâ over and over), âSh*t Surpriseâ is the most Chris Acker song possible, in that its earnestness arrives in spades and comes varnished with a one-of-a-kind, spectacular gnarliness. âWeâd match our breath in the upstairs room and weâd hold together âtil I smelled like you,â Acker sings, before nose-diving into that unforgettable chorus about stepping in a smelly, disgusting pile of sh*t. More than anything else, Famous Lunch finds Chris Acker at his most sentimental and grateful, as he sings about Bunn coffee machines, gas pumps smelling like âthe underside of a fingernailâ in August, â10-inchingâ bread, stealing country club lawn-mower motors, father-son fables, impatient buffet lines, and a broom that âhasnât been used since the last time I used it.â Ackerâs eye for detail remains, and his lexicon includes phrasings that spin out like a hypnotic wash cycle. Seeing the world through his eyes, language remains something worth falling intoâgrowing pains and all.
Original: $40.00
-70%$40.00
$12.00More Images

Famous Lunch
Chris Ackerâs latest collection of songs, Famous Lunch, is in his words, a âgrowing pains album.â When writing the record, the New Orleans' based folk musician found himself hunting for a voice that wasnât just an imitation of the one heâd been using on the last 30 songs heâd made. âAt the same time, I worked hard to find a certain voice for myself over the previous 3 records and I didnât want to abandon that.â While the album finds him continuing to transcribe lifeâs fleeting and provocative banalities with refreshing grace, the songs on Famous Lunch are intentionally more absurd, stylizing his lyricism as both poetic and disarming simultaneouslyâ commencing with âSh*t Surpriseââan earworm with a vernacular that stays true to its title. Inspired by George Saunders and Sasha Pearl (and wanting to make a song that sounds like Eagles saying the word âsh*tâ over and over), âSh*t Surpriseâ is the most Chris Acker song possible, in that its earnestness arrives in spades and comes varnished with a one-of-a-kind, spectacular gnarliness. âWeâd match our breath in the upstairs room and weâd hold together âtil I smelled like you,â Acker sings, before nose-diving into that unforgettable chorus about stepping in a smelly, disgusting pile of sh*t. More than anything else, Famous Lunch finds Chris Acker at his most sentimental and grateful, as he sings about Bunn coffee machines, gas pumps smelling like âthe underside of a fingernailâ in August, â10-inchingâ bread, stealing country club lawn-mower motors, father-son fables, impatient buffet lines, and a broom that âhasnât been used since the last time I used it.â Ackerâs eye for detail remains, and his lexicon includes phrasings that spin out like a hypnotic wash cycle. Seeing the world through his eyes, language remains something worth falling intoâgrowing pains and all.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Chris Ackerâs latest collection of songs, Famous Lunch, is in his words, a âgrowing pains album.â When writing the record, the New Orleans' based folk musician found himself hunting for a voice that wasnât just an imitation of the one heâd been using on the last 30 songs heâd made. âAt the same time, I worked hard to find a certain voice for myself over the previous 3 records and I didnât want to abandon that.â While the album finds him continuing to transcribe lifeâs fleeting and provocative banalities with refreshing grace, the songs on Famous Lunch are intentionally more absurd, stylizing his lyricism as both poetic and disarming simultaneouslyâ commencing with âSh*t Surpriseââan earworm with a vernacular that stays true to its title. Inspired by George Saunders and Sasha Pearl (and wanting to make a song that sounds like Eagles saying the word âsh*tâ over and over), âSh*t Surpriseâ is the most Chris Acker song possible, in that its earnestness arrives in spades and comes varnished with a one-of-a-kind, spectacular gnarliness. âWeâd match our breath in the upstairs room and weâd hold together âtil I smelled like you,â Acker sings, before nose-diving into that unforgettable chorus about stepping in a smelly, disgusting pile of sh*t. More than anything else, Famous Lunch finds Chris Acker at his most sentimental and grateful, as he sings about Bunn coffee machines, gas pumps smelling like âthe underside of a fingernailâ in August, â10-inchingâ bread, stealing country club lawn-mower motors, father-son fables, impatient buffet lines, and a broom that âhasnât been used since the last time I used it.â Ackerâs eye for detail remains, and his lexicon includes phrasings that spin out like a hypnotic wash cycle. Seeing the world through his eyes, language remains something worth falling intoâgrowing pains and all.











