Viva! Terlingua! Nuevo!: Songs of Luckenbach Texas

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CD - Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 10/24/2006
  • Sales Rank: 126,852
  • Label: PALO DURO RECORDS
  • UPC: 806820420123

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Viva! Terlingua! Nuevo!: Songs of Luckenbach Texas

1LISTENIntro 0:31
2LISTENGettin' By 4:23
3LISTENWhat I Like About Texas 3:23
4LISTENBacksliders Wine 3:15
5LISTENLittle Bird 3:57
6LISTENGet It Out! 4:23
7LISTENViva! Luckenbach! 4:06
8LISTENLuckenbach Daylight 5:03
9LISTENI'll Be Here in the Mornin' 5:07
10LISTENDesperados Waiting for the Train 7:16
11LISTENWheel 6:12
12LISTENSangria Wine 3:58
13LISTENLondon Homesick Blues 4:53
14LISTENRed Neck Mother 5:49
15LISTENGonzos Compadres 5:00

Editorial Reviews

In January of 2006, the Palo Duro label put on a two-night showcase in the venerable Luckenbach Dance Hall. The roster was a mixture of artists new and old, and included Morrison-Williams, Kent Finlay, Walt Wilkins, Two Tons of Steel, Cory Morrow, and the Derailers, among others. If, as one must suppose, this disc documents the highlights of those two nights, then it must have been a pretty uneven affair -- though the audience seems to be having plenty of fun throughout, and maybe that's all that counts. Those listeners coming to the music at one remove, though, might be less enthused about, say, Brian Burns' overlong "Desperados Waiting for the Train" or John Arthur Martinez's defiantly über-hokey "Viva! Luckenbach!" than the crowd seems to have been. One problem an album like this makes clear is the inherently limited appeal of songs about Texas in general, let alone about Luckenbach in particular. If they're singing about your home then it's natural to get all caught up in the spirit of a song like "Luckenbach Daylight." But if you're from somewhere else, you tend to focus more on the song itself, and that's not always very rewarding. Count on Morrison-Williams to redeem the genre handily, though (with their brilliant "What I Like About Texas") and on Two Tons of Steel to do the same (in part by changing the subject from Texas to sangria). Uneven, but not bad overall. Rick Anderson, All Music Guide

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