Bluegrass Jim Lauderdale

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/19/2006
  • Sales Rank: 109,526
  • Label: YEP ROC RECORDS
  • UPC: 634457213722
 
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

One of the most reliable songwriters in the land (reliable, that is, for a tart melody and a smart lyric), Jim Lauderdale returns full bore to Bluegrass. While this long-player does not hit the impossible metaphysical highs of his celebrated collaborations with Ralph Stanley (1999's I Feel Like Singing Today and 2002's Grammy-winning Lost in the Pines), it's still a winning and frequently stirring exercise in the traditional style. For the most part, the songs are centered on love and its disintegrations, although some lovely shards of new light cut through here and there. With Bryan Sutton on lead guitar, Jason Stewart and David Talbot sharing banjo duties, Randy Korhs making dobro exclamations throughout, and multiple first-call mandolin and fiddle players, Lauderdale's instrumental support is impeccably nuanced: They limn the dark shadows suggested by the obsession Lauderdale admits to in a minor-key heart-tugger, "I Shouldn't Want You So Bad," and step it up and go when necessary, most impressively on a tersely articulated plea in "Don't Blame the Wrong Guy." Lauderdale, who wrote or co-wrote all the tunes, collaborates with Buddy Miller on one of his most affecting efforts to date, "Love in the Ruins," a mid-tempo tear-jerker that blurs the line between honky-tonk and bluegrass in a number that sounds tailor-made for Buck Owens in another time, another place. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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