Bloom, Red & the Ordinary Girl Tres Chicas

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CD

  • Release Date: 03/07/2006
  • Sales Rank: 117,008
  • Label: YEP ROC RECORDS
  • UPC: 634457209923
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Bloom, Red & the Ordinary Girl

1LISTENDrop Me Down 2:58
2LISTENStone Love Song 4:25
3LISTENMy Love 3:17
4LISTENAll the Shade Trees in Bloom 5:08
5LISTENRed 2:17
6LISTENSway 4:11
7LISTENOnly Broken 3:41
8LISTENStill I Run 5:06
9LISTENThe Man of the People 3:04
10LISTEN400 Flamingos 4:49
11LISTENSlip So Easily 4:22
12LISTENIf You Think That It's All Right 3:15

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

On their second album as Tres Chicas, Caitlin Cary, Tonya Lamm, and Lynn Blakey go beyond side-project status to full-fledged band status, fleshing out the two constants from their debut -- impressive songcraft and beautiful singing -- with scintillating fusions of country, pop, and folk. Recorded in London with white-soul-savvy producers Neil Brockbank and Robert Trehern, Bloom, Red & the Ordinary Girl evinces more of a pop flavor than 2004's Sweetwater, thanks to some tasty electric keyboard work, a more propulsive rhythmic attack, and some lovely choruses that smack of classic Tin Pan Alley approaches. Echoes of Sheryl Crow and Lucinda Williams permeate lolling romantic ruminations such as "Shade Trees in Bloom," which features not only an ethereal lead vocal but some of the most piercing harmonies anyone's likely to find on record this side of the late Carter sisters. Another highlight is the captivating "Still I Run," which bridges the miles between Memphis and Appalachia with its rich organ burbles, synthesized wash of strings, tart lead guitar interjections, piercing harmonies, and crying lead vocal. The gals go country-rock with the gentle stomp "The Man of the People," a scabrous put-down of a duplicitous, hypocritical ne'er-do-well. Southern gospel -- fueled by fiddles and surging organ -- stokes the fire of the opening entreaty, "Drop Me Down." The Chicas may have recorded their sophomore effort across the pond, but they effortlessly, soulfully put across a most American musical message. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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