Beneath This Gruff Exterior John Hiatt & the Goners

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CD

  • Release Date: 05/06/2003
  • Sales Rank: 94,072
  • Label: NEW WEST RECORDS
  • UPC: 607396604524
 
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Editorial Reviews

John Hiatt wasn't just whistling Dixie when he titled his latest album with a promise to give listeners a peek at his inner goings-on. On the surface, Beneath This Gruff Exterior is his most easygoing work in quite a while -- thanks in large part to his decision to reunite his band the Goners after a 15-year recording hiatus. But dig a little deeper, and the mood swings start to appear. They're most apparent on "Nagging Dark," a stark depiction of the singer's battle with depression -- a topic he revisits with a slightly less somber tone on "Almost Fed Up with the Blues." A similarly dark humor permeates "Fly Back Home," a hill-country plaint that could pass for bucolic until Hiatt gets to the meat of the tune: a real-life incident in which he accidentally ran over a rattlesnake and then proceeded to grind the critter into dust under his car wheels. Guitarist Sonny Landreth prods Hiatt here and there, peppering songs like "How Bad's the Coffee" -- a simultaneously clever and homespun embrace of a trip to a blue-highway diner over one to the local Starbucks -- with licks that sting and salve. Hiatt may well be better known for his songwriting -- "The Most Unoriginal Sin," included here, has been a Willie Nelson staple for a decade -- but Beneath This Gruff Exterior attests to the raw energy he's still capable of generating as a performer after all these years. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Beneath This Gruff Exteriorby Anonymous

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April 23, 2003: Since receiving this album through my BMG membership last month, I have to say that I have really taken a liking to it. Since I retired from the Miami police department, I've spent a lot of time building my cd collection. Since I live on a boat, I was really worried about someone ripping me off, but then I realized "Hey, I own a crocodile for crying out loud!". So, I started collecting cds as a hobby. This cd has a lot of nice tracks to listen to while I drive around town in my Ferrari. Some of my favorite tracks include "A shoe full of baked beans is no shoe of mine", "The rock-hard poop that damaged my hide", and "Arnold Drummond was a blessed soul". This cd has a real tropical feel to it, so it's a great soundtrack for sitting out in the sun with a fruity cocktail. There are a lot of deeper messages throughout the album, too, so it can be appreciated on both levels.