<< MP3 Bryan & The Haggards Feat. Dr Eugene Chadbourne – Merles Just Want To Have Fun (2013)
Bryan & The Haggards Feat. Dr Eugene Chadbourne – Merles Just Want To Have Fun (2013)
Category Sound
FormatMP3
SourceCD
Bitrate320kbit
GenreJazz
GenreCountry
GenreFolk
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 10 months
Size 131.9 MB
 
Website http://www.amazon.com/Merles-Just-feat-Eugene-Chadbourne/dp/B00F4IH4CU
 
Sender Spikkert (zXRXg)
Tag Country
 
Searchengine Search
NZB NZB
 
Number of spamreports 0

Post Description

A two-step shuffle, a slightly exaggerated country croon, and two feisty saxes with occasional late-period Coltrane wails arousing suspicions that these are wack jazz guys playing Merle Haggard, not dedicated country music musicians. Suspicions that turn into hardened convictions when one last shout of “If you don’t love it, leave it!” kicks off a free jazz freak out.
If that’s how “Fightin’ Side of Me” is sounding like, then this must be Bryan and the Haggards playing it.
When this rowdy troupe led by saxophonist Bryan Murray came forth with their first album Pretend It’s The End of the World back in 2010, I thought then that the idea of rendering the music of a country music icon through the free form blender was a good — even great — for a one-off album. But Murray, second saxophonist Jon Irabagon, guitarist Lundbom, bassist Moppa Elliott and drummer Danny Fischer have had way too much fun and indulged their diversionary pleasure again the next year with Still Alive and Kickin’ Down the Walls. And now, album number three is forthcoming, and it’s a doozy. Because they’re being joined this time by one of the godfathers of outlaw jazz, a banjo and dobro virtuoso, the zany and incomparable Dr. Eugene Chadbourne.
There can never be a pairing more natural than the Haggards and Chadbourne. Chadbourne has long delighted in contorting country music and confounding its fans and causing a Reagan administration spokesman to declare that his music poses “a direct threat to the American way of life.” Chadbourne has always wanted to make an album like this, outside of his Shockabilly side project. His banjo and dobro bring more twang to the group, without sacrificing any of the crazy. If anything, the crazy got turned up.
The band likes to get going with chugging, train like honky-tonk rhythms as on “Old Man From the Mountain” and “Working Man Medley,” where Murray and Irabagon can be heard behind Chadbourne nearly-straight vocal delivery, chirping and generally being mischievous, and guitars barely staying in tune with the melody. The band makes a barely tempered racket behind the lyrics on “If We Make It Through December,” and the Glenn Miller-styled saxes temporarily pull the song into another key, like an unholy alliance between Nashville and LSD. The vocals, bass and banjo render jaunty “I Take A Lot of Pride In What I Am” straight, but there’s no telling what the rest of the band are playing, and the resulting dissonance can push country music fans from mere confusion to outright derisioin.

Tracklisting:
01 Fightin' Side of Me
02 Old Man from the Mountain
03 Mama Tried
04 I Take a Lot of Pride in What I am
05 Bob Wills medley
06 Listening to the Wind
07 Stay Here and Drink
08 If We Make it through December
09 Working Man Medley
10 Okie from Muskogee
11 The Way I Am
12 That's the News

Extra Informatie:
Aantal Discs: 1xCD
Genre: Jazz, Folk, Country
Format: MP3 @ 320kbit
Year of Release: 2013
Speelduur: 56 minuten
Cover: Front is in de RARs verwerkt

Comments # 0