[2][3] It was the band's most commercially successful release, and produced their biggest chart hit, "A Penny More".
Although the band pursued litigation to win back the master tapes, they were not successful.
The Toronto Star called the album "so comfy and narcoleptic the band sounds like it's having a tough time staying awake through 11 tracks.
"[7] The Calgary Herald deemed it "a journal of life's frustrations, an inevitable part of existence," writing that "the Skydiggers capture this plaintive feel better than most bands, pacing their second album like drizzle on a windowsill.
's earlier albums, not so much because of the Byrds-like harmonies and jangly guitars but because the plainspoken, soulful songs.