Two years after the release of Counting Crows' second studio album, 1996's
Recovering the Satellites, the band collaborated with producers David Lowery and Dennis Herring in a rented house in
Hollywood, Los Angeles to record their third album. Describing the content of the album in comparison to other releases by the band, lead singer and primary song writer Adam Duritz remarked, "I think the first [album] was really about yearning for a change where you are, and I think the second album was very much about having gotten that change and being thrown up in the stratosphere and kind of come crashing down. And I think [
This Desert Life] is about sort of recognizing that life is about confusion and change". Lowery compared Counting Crows' past works from a more commercial aspect: "Commercially, it's been very successful for [Counting Crows] to be very introspective and sort of sad. So on this record, I thought we'd get a least a little bit of this humor and reverence to come through". While writing and recording the album, the band allowed two songs to be used on movie soundtracks: "
Colorblind" and "Baby, I'm a Big Star Now". The former was featured in the 1999 film
Cruel Intentions, while the latter would feature in the 1998 film
Rounders. "Colorblind" would also be used in 2014's
Mommy. Concerned about having too many songs from the album available in other places, Duritz believed that two album tracks on other albums could detract people from buying
This Desert Life. He was also finding it difficult to sequence the song with the album's other tracks. Ultimately, it was left off the album. When an instrumental score album for
Rounders was released instead of soundtrack album, "Baby, I'm a Big Star Now" was not broadly commercially available for many years. It was something Duritz came to regret. The song was released as a B-side on the "Hanginaround" single, and was eventually included as bonus track on the UK release of 2008's
Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings. It was most recently featured in an episode of the television series
The Bear. ==Track listing==