Warpaint The Black Crowes

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CD - Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 03/04/2008
  • Sales Rank: 38,050
  • Label: MEGAFORCE
  • UPC: 020286112723
More FormatsOnline Price
CD - Bonus Tracks$45.99
Vinyl LP$17.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Warpaint

1LISTENGoodbye Daughters of the Revolution 5:03
2LISTENWalk Believer Walk 4:39
3LISTENOh Josephine 6:37
4LISTENEvergreen 4:20
5LISTENWe Who See the Deep 4:49
6LISTENLocust Street 4:14
7LISTENMovin' on Down the Line 5:41
8LISTENWounded Bird 4:23
9LISTENGod's Got It 3:22
10LISTENThere's Gold in Them Hills 4:46
11LISTENWhoa Mule 5:45

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Looking back, it seems inevitable that the Black Crowes would suffer a rocky middle age. Young bands yearning to be old tend to stumble when the years start to pile up, once hunger and ambition start to fade into the ceaseless grind of the road, and the Crowes were no exception. After they mapped out the furthest reaches of their world on 1994's Amorica they slowly spun their tires, turning out records both respectable and tired, before internal tensions slowly tore the brothers Robinson apart, leading to a split in 2002, not long after the release of their sixth album, Lions. A few years of solo wanderings led the Crowes to a reunion in 2005, but they had to go through a few more lineup changes -- including the addition of North Mississippi Allstar Luther Dickinson as the replacement for guitarist Marc Ford -- before they buckled down to record their seventh album, 2008's Warpaint. All that turmoil and trouble are felt on Warpaint, as are the years the band spent paying dues on the jam band circuit after Amorica. Warpaint shows that the decade of hard struggle gave the Crowes soul and chops, turning them into the band they've always wanted to be. The Black Crowes haven't changed their basic sound -- ever since Shake Your Money Maker the band has always drawn deeply from the Stones and Faces, tempering that British swagger with Southern-fried blues borrowed from the Allmans, then slowly threading hippie mysticism throughout -- but the feel of the band has changed, as the Crowes have turned from reckless ruffians into seasoned veterans, with the group feeling lived-in and genuine. There's depth here, highlighted by an instrumental suppleness that slightly recalls Little Feat -- particularly on the slow-rolling "Oh Josephine" with its gently cascading choruses -- an evolution that could only be earned during those years on the road, building the band through nightly jams and a slow cycle of membership turnovers. This is a suppleness that has grit, thanks especially to Dickinson's glass slide runs that give this music some welcome grease. The Crowes also pull off a couple of sly moves here, weaving some swirling psychedelia through the chorus of "Movin' on Down the Line," turning the Reverend Charlie Jackson's "God's Got It" into a heavy, heavy backwoods stomp, then spinning the closing "Whoa Mule" into a roiling blues raga. These are the turns and tricks of veterans, who can slide these flourishes into their signature sound without calling attention to their changeups, but these numbers are enough of a departure to garner attention -- what may not get as much praise is how the Crowes write compellingly within their standard sound, as they do here, beginning with the opening gambit of the down'n'dirty "Goodbye Daughters of the Revolution" and the crawling "Walk Believer Walk." From there, Warpaint continues to gain momentum, as this album is not only their strongest set of songs since Amorica, it has a depth and presence that is rare for a digital age creation and, best of all, the album has a true narrative thrust, making it feel like a true classic rock album. What the Black Crowes have done here is what true journeymen do: they don't renounce their past, they build upon it, finding hidden depths within it, shaping tradition after their own image to make it sound fresh. They're old-fashioned, but in the best sense: they're in it for the long haul, which the superb Warpaint proves beyond a shadow of a doubt. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

A reviewerby Anonymous

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June 09, 2008: If you like the hard charging rock 'n roll of their older CDs (Remedy, Sting Me, By Your Side, Kickin' My Heart Around, Go Faster, Horsehead, etc)you're in for a letdown. Daughters of the Revolution and one other song - I can't even remember its name - are the only songs on the CD that sound like the Crowes. Even the slow tunes are forgettable compared to the ones on Southern Harmony, Amorica, etc. This was really surprising, as their most recent live CD was nothing short of awesome. Sorry - this one just didn't do much for me...

Rock N' Roll Strolls In on A White Horseby Anonymous

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March 09, 2008: The Black Crowes have always eluded to, but never met, their immense promise and calling, as traditional rock-n-roll's last torchbearers. That changes with "War Paint", where the addition of Luther Dickinson on guitar really perches the band onto a whole new promising plain creatively. The band still wears it's influences boldly upon it's sleeves, but there is clearly an emerging identity to the band that had previously been hoped for, but never fulfilled. Most of all, platitudes aside, the band rocks and it's grooves are as buoyant and loose as ever


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