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These Alabama rockers achieved critical acclaim for 2001s double-CD
Southern Rock Opera, a two-act,
Tommy-goes-to-Dixie opus juxtaposing the tragedy of
Lynyrd Skynyrd and the life of the Truckers prolific songwriter and enigmatic vocalist Patterson Hood. But long out of print even before Operas release is the simpler and more impulsive 1998 debut
Gangstabilly (also remastered and re-released on New West Records), a 48-hour live-in-the-studio jam session of boiled-over twang, double-barrel rock and roll and South-deprecating wit. While nothing is off-limits in Hood's Deep South reconnaissance--Faberge cologne, domestic violence, Led Zeppelin, Republicans in hell, Porter Wagoner, baloney sandwiches and '68 Bonnevilles--the Truckers tread on the imagery with reverence rather than mockery. A tribute to late actor "Steve McQueen" is faster than the car-chase scene in
Bullitt. The crudeness-meets-reality of "Buttholeville" is as much white heat as it is white trash. And Hoods "The Living Bubba," about an Atlanta musician dying of AIDS who "cant die now cuz I got another show," turns from an earnest tribute to a "no preachin', no self-servin'" message from a band with a conscience--and a future.
- Scott Holter
Product Description
Re-issue of long out of print CD from the Drive-By Truckers. Re-mastered with up-dated linner notes from Patterson Hood.