Live Wide Open Martin Sexton

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CD

  • Release Date: 04/02/2002
  • Original Release: 2000
  • Sales Rank: 25,180
  • Label: KITCHEN TABLE
  • UPC: 634457142022
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Live Wide Open

Disc 1
1LISTENIn the Journey 6:05
2LISTENAngeline 4:05
3LISTENBeast in Me 7:50
4LISTENFreedom of the Road 5:20
5LISTENHallelujah 4:01
6LISTENThings You Do to Me 4:16
7LISTENWomen and Wine 5:06
8LISTENWhere Did I Go Wrong 4:20
9LISTEN13 Step Boogie 5:29

Disc 2
1LISTENGypsy Woman 16:23
2LISTENCant Stop 5:57
3LISTENWasted 4:01
4LISTENBlack Sheep 10:31
5LISTENIce Cream Man 5:58
6LISTENAmazing Grace 1:38

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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Martin Sexton's first live CD is appropriately titled Live Wide Open, but it might just as well be called "Sexton Unbound." Though the singer/songwriter gives dynamic performances on all of his albums, this freewheeling, powerhouse two-disc live set makes the studio records seem straightjacketed by comparison. Sexton is playful, rambunctious, and endlessly creative on every minute of this album. Most of these songs have, of course, appeared on his studio efforts (all four of which are well represented here), but there isn't a track on Live Wide Open that doesn't seem substantially different from prior versions. The folky "Gypsy Woman" becomes a 16-minute Middle Eastern-flavored funk-rock jam. "Hallelujah," a snappy '70s soul-pop tune from Wonder Bar, is played here with such gravity and sincerity that it almost sounds more like Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" than Martin Sexton's. "Black Sheep" begins as a soft, torchlit ballad before winding into a Sunday-go-to-meetin' gospel rendition of "This Little Light of Mine." With the exception of a swaggering blues cover of John Brim's "Ice Cream Man" that features Nils Lofgren on guitar, Sexton does all of his genre-hopping with only drummer, Joe Bonadio, to back him up. Instead, he slides a thumb up and down his guitar's low E string to create a surprisingly convincing bass sound and wails into a distorted microphone to simulate screaming electric guitar solos. It is a remarkable tour de force performance that plays to all of Sexton's strengths -- his buoyant energy, expansive vocals, and eclectic musicianship -- while rendering his weaknesses -- the relative superficiality of some of his songwriting -- virtually irrelevant. Evan Cater, All Music Guide

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