Stan Ridgway - Snakebite - Blacktop Ballads & Fugitive Songs [2
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- Audio > FLAC
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- 490.52 MB
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- Uploaded:
- Mar 10, 2011
- By:
- Robbie6ty
Stan Ridgway Snakebite - Blacktop Ballads & Fugitive Songs Label: redFLY Records Released: 2004 Source: Original CD Size Torrent: 335 MB Format: FLAC “A glorious, hardboiled Hollywood road movie for the ears, which takes the listener on a tumbleweed journey in three acts through his dark imagination.†Like that of many artists who came of age in the '80s, Stan Ridgway's career has often been unfairly haunted by an endless groove of MTV overexposure that's turned perceptions of his music into something akin to a skipping record. Indeed, the veteran L.A. singer-songwriter once groused he'd likely spend his twilight years onstage in a newly liberated Havana casino lounge, crooning "Mexican Radio" to blue-haired former new wavettes. But this savory trove of songs ranks with Black Diamond as one of the best albums Ridgway has recorded since his muscular reemergence as an indie artist in the mid-'90s. Mining the same electro-acoustic vein as Anatomy, Ridgway has refined his nervous balance of traditional folk-blues and ironic-modernist instincts even further here, shrewdly casting the material in a three-act dramatic structure that sharpens its dramatic focus. The usual suspects of Stan's compelling musique noir herein feature seedy, if oddly sympathetic miscreants (the wry toe-tapper "Wake Up Sally [The Cops Are Here]," "Running with the Carnival"), a familiar musician all too wise to both his past and future ("That Big 5-O," "Talkin' Wall of Voodoo Blues"), and a blue-collar warehouse worker moving mysterious cargo Middle Eastward (the dour "Afghan Forklift"). His balladeer instincts may draw him to personal interludes both bittersweet ("Our Manhattan Moment") and elegiac ("Into the Sun," "My Rose Marie"), but it's when Ridgway fuses his Johnny Cash/Ernie Ford/Mose Allison fetishes with his own compelling personal ethos (the haunting, harmonica-seasoned "God Sleeps in a Caboose," a headline-timely, appropriately creeped-out cover of Allison's "Monsters of the Id") that Ridgway again confirms his status as one of America's most consistently original songwriters and performers. Jerry McCulley Personnel Brantley Kearns - fiddle Stan Ridgway - vocals, guitar Rick King - guitar Adrid Frid - harp Alvin Fike - French horn Bruce Zelesnik - drums Hayden Burke - bass guitar Pietra Wexstun - Wurlitzer piano, sound effects Track Listing 1. Into The Sun 2. Wake Up Sally (The Cops Are Here) 3. Afghan - Forklift 4. King For a Day 5. Your Rockin’ Chair 6. Monsters of the ID 7. Running With the Carnival 8. Our Manhattan Moment 9. Crow Hollow Blues 10. That Big 5-0 11. God Sleeps in a Caboose 12. Throw It Away 13. My Own Universe 14. Classic Hollywood Ending 15. Talkin’ Wall of Voodoo Blues Pt. 1 16. My Rose Marie (A Soldier’s Tale)