In the Land of Salvation and Sin The Georgia Satellites

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/14/2005
  • Original Release: 1989
  • Sales Rank: 18,968
  • Label: COLLECTABLES
  • UPC: 090431655726

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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In the Land of Salvation and Sin

1LISTENI Dunno 3:11
2LISTENBottle O' Tears 3:54
3LISTENAll Over But the Cryin' 5:13
4LISTENShake That Thing 5:14
5LISTENSix Years Gone 3:11
6LISTENGames People Play 3:43
7LISTENAnother Chance 4:33
8LISTENBring Down the Hammer 4:24
9LISTENSlaughterhouse 2:49
10LISTENStellazine Blues 4:10
11LISTENSweet Blue Midnight 6:25
12LISTENDays Gone By 3:37
13LISTENCrazy 3:25
14LISTENDan Takes Five 3:23

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

In the Land of Salvation and Sin was an attempt by Georgia Satellites' songwriter and frontman Dan Baird to reinvent his band while not changing the formula too drastically. The band's third and final outing, it followed the disappointing sales of Open All Night with an even harder approach that kept its focus on American roots music. The sound may never have strayed far from the raucous, garagey style that gave the band its hit with 1986's "Keep Your Hands to Yourself," but it also took deeper consideration of pop radio as well, as evidenced by the power ballad "It's All Over But the Crying." "Shake That Thing" is a tribute to Lowell George and evokes the late songwriter's sense of humor and, of course, wrangling slide guitar, as well as Little Feat's funky backbeat and chorus line refrains. The stomp and drunken roll of "Six Years Gone" sounds like a great lost Faces track -- and as evidence, "Another Chance" (written by Baird) emulates the interplay between Faces' Ronnie Lane's songwriting style and Ron Wood's slide guitar playing on "Ooh La La," to the degree he includes a "Hats off to Woody and Ronnie Lane" in the songwriting credits. The platitudes don't stop there, though; the cover of Joe South's "Games People Play" is a barnburning slide guitar rocker sung by guitarist Rick Richards, and "Stellazine Blues" emulates both "Hand of Fate" and "Undercover of the Night" by the Rolling Stones. And as a recording of tribute to their influences, this record works like a charm. Baird is a savvy enough songwriter to do anything he wants, and that he can make something new from something old is to his credit. In the Land of Salvation and Sin might have been a strange career move and it went nowhere, but it stands as the band's most consistent and innovative recording. Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

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