Last Days at the Lodge Amos Lee

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/24/2008
  • Sales Rank: 13,196
  • Label: BLUE NOTE RECORDS
  • UPC: 5099950122523

Listener Rating: (4 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Authenticity" See All

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CD$45.99
Vinyl LP$17.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Last Days at the Lodge

1LISTENListen 3:10
2LISTENWon't Let Me Go 4:17
3LISTENBaby I Want You 3:00
4LISTENTruth 3:23
5LISTENWhat's Been Going On 4:15
6LISTENStreet Corner Preacher 3:14
7LISTENIt Started to Rain 3:05
8LISTENJails and Bombs 2:53
9LISTENKid 3:11
10LISTENEase Back 4:32
11LISTENBetter Days 2:50

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Should he want to, Amos Lee could claim the mantle of modern-day bluesman more credibly than most hoodoo-talking six-string slingers. On his third album, the Philadelphia singer-songwriter with the soulman’s cadence and a fondness for the intimate acousticity of folk-rock cuts a dark figure. There’s the usual folkie relationship talk, to be sure, with breakups that end hauntingly in the rain (“It Started to Rain”) but also an undercurrent of jealousy and, yes, violence that rears its head in “What’s Been Going On” and notably, “Truth,” where Lee exhorts, “You coulda told me the truth, sir, before I had to beat it out of you.” Not that these words are necessarily autobiographical. Lee’s as skillful with a character study, evinced starkly on “Street Corner Preacher,” where he economically sketches a figure of pity, rage, and determination, as he’s adept with the social commentary (see “Jails and Bombs”). But they could be. And that’s what a modern-day bluesman should be – not cartoon mack or hoochie-coochie man but a feeling fellow with a soulful voice, one whose passions every once in a while might boil a bit out of control. Perhaps it’s no fluke that aiding Lee on this intimate, involving record is a killer band that makes his every musical move look easy. Spooner Oldham on the keys, Texas guitar whiz Doyle Bramhall II, drummer James Gadson of Bill Withers’s band, and bass ace Pino Palladino (late of the Who) make Last Days at the Lodge a high-water mark for Amos Lee. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 4Reviews: 1

Awesome bluesby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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August 10, 2009: Amost Lee is a masterful poet/storyteller. His lyrics are insightful w/out being overpowering. His soulful style is perfectly rendered on "What's Been Going On" a track about loss and longing. You'll come away from this work relaxed and refreshed not depressed. An excellent escape from the noise of the pop crowd.