Brothers from Different Mothers Dailey & Vincent

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CD

  • Release Date: 03/31/2009
  • Sales Rank: 730
  • Label: ROUNDER / UMGD
  • UPC: 011661061729

Listener Rating: (2 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Sound Quality" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Brothers from Different Mothers

1LISTENHead Hung Down 2:57
2LISTENYou Oughta Be Here with Me 2:22
3LISTENYour Love Is Like a Flower 3:27
4LISTENWhen I've Traveled My Last Mile 2:50
5LISTENYears Ago 2:35
6LISTENThere Is You 2:25
7LISTENGirl in the Valley 2:47
8LISTENPlease Don't Let Our Sweet Love Die 3:44
9LISTENOh Ye Must Be Born Again 2:26
10LISTENWinter's Come and Gone 2:16
11LISTENWhen I Reach That Home Up There 2:51
12LISTENOn the Other Side 4:31

Editorial Reviews

As the album title informs you, Dailey & Vincent are not brothers, but they have that country brother harmony thing down pat. Jamie Dailey and Darrin Vincent both possess high, clear tenor voices, and the timbre of their harmonies blends perfectly, becoming something greater than the sum of its parts. Their first eponymous album stayed at the top of the bluegrass charts for almost a year, and Brothers from Different Mothers is even stronger, with their band's blazing instrumental backup providing a strong counterpoint to their soul-stirring vocals. Dailey & Vincent are traditionalists, but they're not afraid of trying new things. "On the Other Side" features a classical string quartet, something new for bluegrass, to give emotional depth to Jimmy Fortune's song about the death of a parent. The strings give the song a slight folk-pop feel, but the vocals are pure country/bluegrass, with lead harmonies guaranteed to bring a tear. The Statler Brothers seem like an unlikely influence on a bluegrass band, but the duo covers "Years Ago," an arch country tune about a guy sitting in the back of a church while his sweetheart marries another man. Joe Dean, Jr. adds to the Statler feel with his bass vocals on the harmonies. Dailey's jazzy chiming lead guitar enhances the tune's jaunty air. "There Is You" is another Statler tune highlighted by the fiddling of Adam Haynes and Dailey & Vincent's syncopated call-and-response vocals. The Statlers' Harold Reid adds his bass vocal to "Head Hung Down," the string buster that kicks off the album. Haynes rips it up on fiddle and Reid's bass vocal give just the right comedic touch to the song's finale. It's the first time he's ever sung on a non-Statler project, a measure of the respect the legends have for Dailey & Vincent. Other standouts include an achingly poignant cover of Roger Miller's "You Oughta Be Here with Me" and the gospel tunes "When I've Traveled My Last Mile," "When I Reach That Home Up There," and the jubilant "Oh Ye Must Be Born Again." J. Poet, All Music Guide

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