| Genre | Unknown |
|---|---|
| Date (CEST) | 2012-03-10 11:56:04 |
| Group | 404 |
| Size | 112 MB |
| Files | 15 |
| M3U / SFV / NFO | |
Randy_Thompson-Collected-2012-404
Infos
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Tracklist (M3U)
| # | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 01-randy_thompson-songbird.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Songbird | Unknown | Unknown |
| 2 | 02-randy_thompson-unknown_zone.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Unknown Zone | Unknown | Unknown |
| 3 | 03-randy_thompson-dont_you_remember.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Don't You Remember | Unknown | Unknown |
| 4 | 04-randy_thompson-goin_down_to_lynchberg_town.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Goin' Down To Lynchberg Town | Unknown | Unknown |
| 5 | 05-randy_thompson-heart_of_stone.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Heart Of Stone | Unknown | Unknown |
| 6 | 06-randy_thompson-ol_97.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Ol' 97 | Unknown | Unknown |
| 7 | 07-randy_thompson-rocksalt_and_nails.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Rocksalt & Nails | Unknown | Unknown |
| 8 | 08-randy_thompson-you_cant_talk_to_me_like_that.mp3 | Randy Thompson | You Can't Talk To Me Like That | Unknown | Unknown |
| 9 | 09-randy_thompson-twang_this.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Twang This | Unknown | Unknown |
| 10 | 10-randy_thompson-thats_not_me.mp3 | Randy Thompson | That's Not Me | Unknown | Unknown |
| 11 | 11-randy_thompson-one_guitar.mp3 | Randy Thompson | One Guitar | Unknown | Unknown |
| 12 | 12-randy_thompson-wearin_blue.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Wearin' Blue | Unknown | Unknown |
| 13 | 13-randy_thompson-sound_of_the_rain.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Sound Of The Rain | Unknown | Unknown |
| 14 | 14-randy_thompson-molly_and_tenbrooks.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Molly & Tenbrooks | Unknown | Unknown |
| 15 | 15-randy_thompson-bring_on_down_the_rain.mp3 | Randy Thompson | Bring On Down The Rain | Unknown | Unknown |
NFO
Artist: Randy Thompson
Album: Collected
Bitrate: 258kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: Jackpot Records
Genre: Country
Size: 117.72 megs
PlayTime: 1h 00min 28sec total
Rip Date: 2012-03-10
Store Date: 2012-01-23
Track List:
--------
01. Songbird 4:07
02. Unknown Zone 3:32
03. Don't You Remember 5:47
04. Goin' Down To Lynchberg Town 4:07
05. Heart Of Stone 3:59
06. Ol' 97 4:11
07. Rocksalt & Nails 4:17
08. You Can't Talk To Me Like That 2:56
09. Twang This 3:54
10. That's Not Me 3:25
11. One Guitar 3:48
12. Wearin' Blue 3:27
13. Sound Of The Rain 4:23
14. Molly & Tenbrooks 4:14
15. Bring On Down The Rain 4:21
Release Notes:
--------
There has always been a dynamic tension between old and new in the more
thoughtful forms of country music. How does one combine traditional forms with
modern instruments and rhythms? Bluegrass, for example, was created when Bill
Monroe and company took traditional sounds and repackaged them in a new,
hard-driving approach..
Randy Thompson has been composing and playing what he calls "Virginia Red Dirt
Roots Music" for a couple of decade, and has several albums to his name (Wearin'
Blue - 1998, That's Not Me - 2004, Further On - 2008). He traces his Virginia
bloodline back to the 1700s, specifically to the picturesque and historic
Piedmont region. Many of his songs reflect this roots heritage. Collected.
consists of 12 songs redone from previous releases, plus three new songs.
Thompson's band (including Garrick Alden - lead guitar, Rickie Simpkins -
fiddle/mandolin, Andy Hamburger - drums), has a distinct musical style. Part of
it comes from Thompson's taut, expressive baritone. The songs he writes merge
traditional styles with more modern concepts. Finally, the group combines
traditional, acoustic instruments with heavy rock-style rhythms and highly
amplified electric instrumentation. The result is an enjoyable multi-layered mix
of country, rockabilly and classic folk sounds.
"Songbird", which opens the CD, blends high-volume electric guitars and a heavy
backbeat, underlined by banjo arpeggios and traditional call-and-response
lyrics:
Where are you going, with your head hung down that way
Where are you going, with your head hung down that way
I'm looking for a songbird to keep in a cage.
Will your songbird whistle, will your songbird sing,
Will your songbird whistle, will your songbird sing,
My songbird will whistle, but only for me.
The song concludes on a less possessive mindset:
Where are you going on such a fine day,
Where are you going on such fine, fine day,
I'm looking for a songbird so I can set her free.
"Unknown Zone" explores Thompson's Virginia roots, specifically the heritage of
the Civil War.
If you go down, Virginia town
I'm gonna tell you, son,
It's the same red blood as your own,
Down in Virginia mud
Down in that red Virgina mud .
Hey now, what's that sound whispering in the wind
Maybe you heard what you thought you did,
It's the phantom cavalry of Mosby* and his band,
Riding hard into the wind.
You turn around and they're gone,
Yeah, You're entering an unknown zone.
Other songs include:
"You Can't Talk Like That", a more conventional-sounding country song of
defiance toward an old flame.
"Twang This", a rockabilly hymn of resentment toward a social-climbing
antagonist, featuring lead guitar from Thompson.
"One Guitar", a wistful-sounding song about finding refuge from the confusion
and tumult of the modern world.
Thompson also revamps some traditional songs, including "Molly and Tenbrooks", a
song closely identified with Bill Monroe. In a catchy version of "Goin' to
Lynchburg", Thompson switches the major key to a modal one. The song features a
clawhammer banjo solo from Thompson, a two-step drum beat, and some nifty high
sustain, heavily-amplified slide guitar solo from his son Colin.
But the tour de force of the album is Thompson's reworking of "Ol' 97". Thompson
changes the melody from major to minor, while Garrick Alden on electric guitar
and Ricky Simpkins on fiddle trade solos at breakneck speed. The song perfectly
captures the picture of a train racing downhill toward hell (the hero of the
song, after all, gets scalded to death by engine steam).
Thompson said this about Collected.:
"I wanted this to be the album you'd play in the car when you're driving down
Route 66 with the windows wide open." It portrays a simple feeling, but the
statement is more complicated than that. Most people don't listen to music with
the windows wide open - they roll up the windows to avoid the wind obscuring the
sound (not to mention avoiding the possibility of road rage from other
motorists). And Route 66? As fabled as it is in American folklore, it's pretty
much obsolete - parts of it don't even exist anymore.
Perhaps Colonel Mosby and his men aren't the only ghosts roaming the landscape.