500 Miles: The Blue Rock Sessions Cliff Eberhardt

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/15/2009
  • Sales Rank: 13,306
  • Label: RED HOUSE
  • UPC: 033651022121
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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500 Miles: The Blue Rock Sessions

1LISTEN500 Miles 4:33
2LISTENHave a Little Heart 4:14
3LISTENI Want to Take You Home 3:36
4LISTENLonelyville 3:22
5LISTENI Love Money 3:42
6LISTENBreak a Train 4:36
7LISTENEasy Street 3:43
8LISTENLittle Town 3:08
9LISTENWhen the Leaves Begin to Fall 2:05
10LISTENYou Won't Come Back to Me 3:12
11LISTENBack of My Mind 4:06
12LISTENThe Long Road 5:50

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Cliff Eberhardt may have come up on the same '80s East Coast singer/songwriter scene as Shawn Colvin, Lucy Kaplansky, John Gorka, et al., but even from the beginning he had rock & roll -- and even pop -- aspirations. His early albums found him leaning toward Springsteen-esque heartland rock and almost John Waite-ish balladry as much as the folkish approach of his aforementioned peers, and his rough-edged voice and hook-centric songwriting made it all work. The further into his career he gets, however, the more he concentrates on spare, acoustic-based settings and slow, soulful ballads. Call it "maturity," "evolution," or "back to basics," the important thing is that he can pull it off a hell of a lot more convincingly than some straight-up rocker for whom the acoustic troubadour mode is an unprecedented step. On this, the eighth album of a recording career that began in 1990, the fiftysomething songwriter furthers the organic, as-close-to-live-as-possible approach of his preceding release, The High Above and the Down Below, sounding completely at ease in this mode. Sometimes, as on "Have a Little Heart" and a remake of "The Long Road," the title track from his '90 debut album, Eberhardt lays into a big, bold pop melody that wouldn't sound out of place being belted out by an American Idol contestant (that's not a pejorative statement). But for the most part, his gritty, soul-soaked voice leans comfortably into more low-key constructions. Most of these songs have the feel of hard-earned wisdom from a man who has run life's emotional gauntlet and emerged with not just some trenchant, humbly offered observations, but the knowledge that the best way to put them across is a soft sell. J. Allen, All Music Guide

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