|
|
| ||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fred gets serious,
By dggfwtx (Fort Worth, TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dusty (Audio CD)
This CD was released on Fred's website back in August and I got it then. I'll admit, it was slow to grow on me. It's kind of different for Fred. There are no upbeat numbers here, and the songs are more lushly orchestrated than you'd normally expect on a Fred CD. The songs on this CD are mostly about loss, from a friend to a girl, to a vanishing lifestyle. But Fred really shows his songwriting and singing skills to their fullest. Among the many great cuts are Ship, Crowds, Hey Baby and Codeine. Wichita, about a young man, an old-timer and a stolen racehorse, is one of the finest and most moving cuts on the CD. All in all, one of my favorite CDs of the year. The songs are sad, but beautiful.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Workingman's Poet,
By Lee Armstrong (Winterville, NC United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Dusty (Audio CD)
Fred Eaglesmith's newest CD is a small affair. But like many small affairs, it's more intimate & immediate. My favorite track is the upbeat "Tunnel" with the little xylophone sounds giving it a sparkling feeling, "Now she's standing in the darkness, a shattered world, she's broken hearted, I light the light at the end of the tunnel." It's hopeful & cheerful. "I 75" is another great song that stands up with the best of Fred's work, "His gearshift is stuck & he can't move his truck & he's lost between low & high & the river of cars, they fall like stars down on I 75." Lyrically, Fred's a workingman's poet. "Hey Baby" is another utter delight, a lustful urgency puts an edge in Eaglesmith's vocal as the track builds with a delightful percussion and then the high-pitched organ almost jumping out of its skin, "You say you love me, you're thinking of me & that you'll always be true; And then you're gone, I'm all alone & you're with somebody new & it makes me blue." The other tracks are also good with "Rainbow" and Fred's 7-minute "Wichita" that is the centerpiece of this set of particular note. Another great set from one of North America's best! Bravo!
14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fred Eaglesmith- Dusty,
By
This review is from: Dusty (Audio CD)
Fred Eaglesmith: Dusty Do you know what a "mesa" is? If your answer is no, then words like "rusty," "dusty," "leather boots," "cough," "flies," and "texas" should clue you in. Right from the start of the record, the road tested, listener approved Fred Eaglesmith makes it clear that he's not from around here. He's from Canada. He was a hobo. He's seen poverty, divorce, and pain pain pain... This particular album, Fred's 12th? (maybe his 20th... who knows?) is a willing victim of very stylized production. This kind of production is a necessity if an album is going to pull the listener in enough to make him/her listen to the whole disc all the way through. It seems at first as though this producer decided to make the theme, "Casio Keyboard Beats." This decision tells me, and many others that he's just trying ot mix it up, and he's essentially flushing the album down the toilet. But nope. It's far from being flushed! The seemingly inexpensive beats lead your ear to the other instruments and to the beauty of the melodies. There is something quaint, and at the same time ballsy about using such cheesy beats as the foundation for a song. Some numbers even sound like he used a glorified metronome. In any case, it makes for a fresh album, that will not find its way out of the cd changer, or the head of its listener for a long time. Perhaps there are those out there who won't be as enthusiastic about "Dusty." But I'm willing to bet they are the ones who haven't been deserted, and have never seen the predictable drama that comes with poverty. In the second track, "Tunnel" Fred sings about the way his lady can straighten his paths and be the inspiration for living the good life, and fighting the good fight. There are two more songs that lay between this song of devotion and thanks and the sorrow-filled, moving break-up song titled, "Rainbow." Fred asks in "Rainbow," '...what are you supposed to do, when your rainbow breaks in two...?" In just two songs, Fred went from thankful, to broken... and this change is justified in the songs sandwiched between the two. In "I-75" (the third track) a picture is painted of trapped souls trying to escape the personal hell and strain they are in. They all try to drive down I-75 to get away, only to fade away like falling stars. And in the next song (the fourth track), Fred is further lamenting his tough situation and praying to the Lord for a rest. So there you have it... life is tough, and when its as tough as it is in tracks three and four, it can take its toll and cause the sad break-ups we've all seen in track five. Every song is different story. Each story with common threads: being strung out, looking for an escape, heartbreak, alcohol, drugs and the grime of life. This isn't the typical "Woe is me" album that turns into a whining-fest from the start. This album is bitter sweet, and it's that ability to mix two unorthodox things together that makes Fred the talented artist he is. Who else can get away with putting coedine and cattle in the first line of a song? The question is important, and the answer is obvious...
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
|
|
Tags Customers Associate with This Product(What's this?)Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
|
|
This product's forum
Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
|
Related forums
|