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Music CD - Gary Louris: Vagabonds

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Music CD: Vagabonds Artist: Gary Louris
List Price: $16.98
Our Price: $10.28
Your Save: $ 6.70 ( 39% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Rykodisc
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. True Blue 2. Omaha Nights 3. To Die A Happy Man 4. She Only Calls Me On Sundays 5. We'll Get By 6. Black Grass 7. I Wanna Get High 8. Vagabonds 9. D.C. Blues 10. Meandering
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0014431092527 Label: Rykodisc Manufacturer: Rykodisc Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Rykodisc Release Date: 2008-02-19 Studio: Rykodisc
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Trial pick Comment: I've had many a good random pick from previous reviews, but I should have read a bit further on this one ... no depth to the music, vocals weak, overall, probably will join the bottom of the cd pile.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Jayhawks leader on his own Comment: Gary has been a busy boy, between fronting the Jayhawks and co-writing many of the songs on the Dixie Chicks' Grammy winner. This record is good, but not great - there's something indefinable that's missing here compared to the best Jayhawks stuff. Nonetheless, the songs and production are impeccable, and the result generally enjoyable.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Straight From the Heart Comment: Gary's songs are straight from his heart to yours. There's a timeless quality here that crosses eerily and effortlessly from the 70s right into today. Something about his voice and the unique chord progressions grabs you where it matters most and once you've heard this CD you'll never forget it. To top it all off he has superb backup musicians, especially the haunting pedal steel guitar. The Laurel Canyon Family Choir is the frosting on the cake here on several tracks. All in all, a most impressive project destined to live forever. Go get 'em, Gary!
Customer Rating:      Summary: FINE SONGS WITH INTROSPECTIVE LYRICS - AND WITH A 1970s RETRO INFLUENCE Comment: I'm not familiar with the music of GL or the Jayhawks - we live a cloistered life here in the UK. However, I knew he had a reputation as a good song writer and the music samples sounded 'interesting'; so I took a chance and bought 'Vagabonds' - I wasn't disappointed.
With a casual first time listen, you might think 'some pleasant, if rather lightweight, pop songs'. Well, pleasant pop songs - YES; but musically and lyrically lightweight - NO. 'Vagabonds' has a very atmospheric sound (I think another reviewer uses the word 'eerie' - and I wouldn't argue with this). Also, as other reviewers have noted, the album has a strong 1970s feel about it - mainly a West Coast influence, but there are also some strands of British popular music from that era (and all songs benefit from a professional 21st. century production sheen). I don't think GL is a dynamic vocalist; he has a plaintive, slightly fragile voice, but he also has a lot of style - and so does his music. There isn't a bad song on this album, most have decent melodies and thoughtful lyrics. The production and arrangements are first class, with a few musical 'surprises' now and again - you really do need to listen to each track all the way through.
Some comments about selected tracks (all songs written by GL) :
TRUE BLUE - Perhaps, one of the more accessible songs on the album - strong melody and engaging lyrics. Also, solid musicianship with 'full bodied' piano, wistful pedal steel and crisp percussion.
SHE ONLY CALLS ME ON SUNDAYS - A waltz with a strong country flavour. A sad song about faded love and separation. He feels powerless to restore the relationship; she resorts to prescription drugs, cigarettes and alcohol to numb the heartache - only on Sundays, do lingering memories come to the surface ('She reached for the bottle and the phone').
BLACK GRASS - You might notice the occasional similarities with John Lennon's 'Jealous Guy'. There's a 2 minute instrumental/choral bridge with some emphatic keyboard playing and ethereal harmony vocals; it's a strange mixture, but it works - it's almost 'psychedelic'.
I WANNA GET HIGH - LG is more economical with his lyrics. However, they are effective to the extent that they vividly convey the 'altered state' of drug induced oblivion (not that I would know about such things of course - I'm only guessing). The interwoven sounds of acoustic/electric guitars and organ give this track an edgier sound than most others.
The music on 'Vagabonds' is best appreciated after a few good listens. It's a very sensuous album - in terms of its melodies, lyrics, playing and arrangements, there is much to pick up on; and it all adds up to some remarkable song writing.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Sounds like a classic 1970's record Comment: Chris Robinson of the Black Crowes produced this, allowing Gary Louris to relax and settle into the true feeling of the songs, so nothing sounds forced. If its unforced setting has a downside, its occasionally too relaxed, but the overall feeling you get is wholly intended. The mixture of Gary's voice is often close to the front of the sound, letting the musicians create a comfortable wallpaper that rewards the singing. Simply awesome steel guitar permeates the proceedings, bringing you home to Gary's former band The Jayhawks without sounding like them.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Gary Louris has shown pop-star eager earmarks since 1989, when his endearing "Baltimore Sun" cracked the honky-tonk playlist that was the Jayhawks' sophomore record, Blue Earth. While Louris dipped his toe in a pop direction after Jayhawks co-founder Mark Olson departed in 1995, he never took the full plunge until now, with his first solo effort. Chiming with guitars and choruses and soaring melodies straight out of 1975, Vagabonds rightfully pens the Minneapolis musician inside a small stable of America's greatest songwriters--and singers--adding three or four compositions to his career-best list. The 10-song record (produced by Chris Robinson, late of the Black Crowes) polishes the wide-ranging Louris palette with the simplest of instrumentation, including organ and banjo, ethereal pedal steel playing from Josh Grange, and a backing chorale led by Susannah Hoffs and Jenny Lewis. Louris's saccharine falsetto has never sounded better, whether it's offering Paul Simon-like imagery ("To Die A Happy Man"), channeling John Lennon ("Black Grass") and Nick Drake ("Meandering"), or preaching with the Laurel Canyon choir ("I Wanna Get High"). Jayhawks followers will find comfort in "True Blue"--missing only Olson's co-vocals--and "D.C. Blues," in which Louris borrows the traditional country line, "Hand me down my walking cane," before declaring, "It's my game to win / It's my game to lose." My money is on the former. --Scott Holter
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