Starlite Walker is the first studio album by American indie rock band Silver Jews.
[8][9] It was released in 1994 as an LP and CD on Drag City (DC55) in America and on Domino (WIG15) in Europe.
[12] In a documentary about the band, Berman stated that the early development of the album was influenced by his job as a security guard at the Whitney: "We were working at the Whitney with all this conceptual art, and we were learning about it … and so I thought, “Well let’s just make this record that looks like a record, and has song titles and everything, but the songs would be the ones we make at home that sound terrible.”[13] In his book Gimme Indie Rock, music journalist Andrew Earles wrote that the album "mixes '70s afternoon rock, Pavement's indie balladry, Berman's poignant lyricism, and lone troubadour folk of the '60s and '70s".
[14] Trouser Press wrote that "while it gets laid-back enough at times to pass for a long-lost New Riders of the Purple Sage album, Starlite Walker possesses enough temperate charm to soothe even the most savage discordophile.
"[15] Drowned in Sound wrote that the album "may very well be the greatest jam session of half-formed ideas ever made.