Showing posts with label Raul Malo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raul Malo. Show all posts

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Raul Malo - Lucky One

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:39
Size: 118.2 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:31] 1. Lucky One
[4:16] 2. Moonlight Kiss
[3:43] 3. Something Tells Me
[3:29] 4. Hello Again
[4:41] 5. Ready For My Lovin'
[4:45] 6. Crying For You
[3:25] 7. You Always Win
[3:17] 8. Lonely Hearts
[5:28] 9. One More Angel
[4:51] 10. Rosalie
[4:18] 11. Haunting Me
[4:49] 12. So Beautiful

2009 release from the former leader of The Mavericks. Lucky One is his first album of original material in seven years. Drawing on his deep love of Country, Rock, Jazz and Latin music. Malo displays not only his eclectic taste but a crystal clear voice unmatched by any other singer today. 11 tracks including the first single 'Hello Again'.

On "Lucky One," his first album of original material in seven years, Raul Malo has shed his musical shackles. "I have been fighting my whole life against people who want to pigeonhole music. We fought that in the Mavericks. I feel like I've got no restrictions anymore," the Grammy winner says. "I'm not really writing for any specific genre. I feel like I can do whatever I want."

Clearly, followers of Malo's eclectic career--both with the Mavericks and after-- know he's always chafed at placing any confines on music. Or, as he laughingly confesses, "if most people do what I've done in my career, they'd be driving a taxi by now." However, a talent as mighty as Malo's simply can't be denied. His glorious voice has been rapturously described by The New York Times as "exceptional" and the Wall Street Journal as "exquisite." Its crystal purity is simply unmatched by any other singer's today. And a voice like his deserves a loving, sturdy melody to wrap itself around. Although completely contemporary, the music on "Lucky One" recalls the great tunes of the `50s, `60s and `70s, made famous by Malo's musical heroes like Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, Merle Haggard and Buck Owens.

The songs on his Fantasy Records debut range from the silly to the sublime, by Malo's own design, and draw on his deep love of country, rock, jazz and Latin music. "Moonlight Kisses" features a playful male chorus and a snazzy tuba (!!), while songs such as "One More Angel" and "Rosalie" take on gut wrenching loss of life. Malo wrote "Lucky One" over a two-year period at his Nashville home and was so happy with the result that several of his home demos appear as final versions on the CD. For the rest, he enlisted co-producer Steve Berlin, best known for his work with Los Lobos. "I trust Steve musically," Malo says. "Art comes first with him. That's the most important quality of all; nothing gets in the way of that."

"Lucky One" follows "You're Only Lonely" and "After Hours," two CDs of cover songs written by many of Malo's favorite tunesmiths including Kris Kristofferson, Dwight Yoakam, Roger Miller and Willie Nelson. "How could that not influence my songwriting on `Lucky One,'" Malo asks. "It certainly had an effect on how I wrote for this. [There's] an appreciation for song structure, melody and lyric that these guys certainly had."

After close to 20 years of making music, Malo is having more fun than ever. "I get to play exactly what I want. I have a great band. I have great fans," he says. "It's really fantastic. And the creative freedom I have now, I wouldn't trade that for the world." The liberation that true talent and vision bring has led to the ultimate freedom so lovingly evident on "Lucky One": "I know that at the end of the day I can go somewhere with my guitar and someone will come see me."

Lucky One

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Various - Dressed In Black: A Tribute To Johnny Cash

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 50:49
Size: 116.3 MB
Styles: Country, Country-pop
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[2:56] 1. Hank Williams III - Wreck Of The Old '97
[2:38] 2. Robbie Fulks - Cry Cry Cry
[3:09] 3. Rodney Crowell - Ballad Of A Teenage Queen
[3:06] 4. Raul Malo - I Guess Things Happen That Way
[2:16] 5. Chuck Mead - There You Go
[2:27] 6. The Reverend Horton Heat - Get Rhythm
[2:26] 7. Bruce Robison - Pack Up Your Sorrows
[3:46] 8. Billy Burnette - Ring Of Fire
[2:15] 9. Redd Volkaert - Luther Played The Boogie
[2:35] 10. Rosie Flores - Big River
[3:07] 11. James Intveld - Folsom Prison Blues
[2:49] 12. Earl Poole Ball - I Still Miss Someone
[2:41] 13. Damon Bramblett - I'm Gonna Sit On The Porch And Pick On My Old Guitar
[2:51] 14. Dale Watson - I Walk The Line
[3:35] 15. Kenny Vaughan - Train Of Love
[2:07] 16. Eddie Angel - Straight A's In Love
[2:49] 17. Chuck Mead - Jackson
[3:07] 18. Chris Knight - Flesh And Blood

Few artists deserve tribute more than Johnny Cash, and none pose a greater challenge to those who would offer their homage. The problem is that his sound has been pounded so deep into America's soul that it's almost impossible to play his music without lapsing into imitation -- and those who try to avoid that trap can sound a little misguided. Examples of both approaches abound throughout Dressed in Black, though even the bravest performers generally sing to a tack bass rhythm accompanied by those menacing low guitar licks that Cash patented long ago. Some do a pretty good job of evoking Cash, especially James Intveld, whose rendition of "Folsom Prison Blues" comes darn close to the original, and Chuck Mead on "There You Go." Damon Bramblett also has Cash's phrasing down; the fact that his voice is pitched about an octave higher, along with his Maybelle Carter style on guitar, makes "I'm Gonna Sit on the Porch and Pick On My Old Guitar" a special treat. Then there's Billy Burnette, whose playing comes closest to the essence of Cash but whose vocals completely miss the squint-eyed macho quality that "Ring of Fire" requires. Rarest of all are those artists who have found their own voice yet use this format to acknowledge their forebears; none does this more persuasively than Dale Watson, who turns "I Walk the Line" into something both powerful and original -- the ultimate tribute that anyone can pay to the real icons in this business. ~Robert L. Doerschuk

Dressed In Black: A Tribute To Johnny Cash