Anson Funderburgh & The Rockets - Which Way Is Texas? (2003)

  • 20 Feb, 10:32
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Artist:
Title: Which Way Is Texas?
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Bullseye Blues & Jazz
Genre: Blues, Modern Electric Blues, Texas Blues
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 43:37
Total Size: 107/306Mb (covers)
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Can We Get Together 03:20
02. One Woman I Need 03:14
03. Tryin' To Get Back On My Feet 02:47
04. Rambling Woman 03:00
05. Some Sunny Day 02:42
06. Going My Way? 04:47
07. The Last Tune 02:37
08. Don't Turn This Child Away From Heaven 03:51
09. Hoodoo Party 03:31
10. Toss And Turn 02:45
11. Jungle 03:43
12. I Need To Know 03:17
13. Crutch And Cane 03:56

On his second outing on Bullseye, bluesman Anson Funderburgh & the Rockets deliver a solid album. "Can We Get Together" offers a spunky lead track with Sam Myers on vocals and the Texas Horns adding an extra bit of pizzazz. Funderburgh offers one of his rare vocals on "One Women I Need," a nice ballad with Gentleman John Street's piano and organ providing an atmospheric backdrop. The instrumental "Going My Way?" gives Funderburgh, Street, drummer Wes Starr, and bassist Johnny Bradley a chance to kick out the jams, while the band pays its dues to classic blues on good versions of Johnny Walker's "Rambling Woman" and B.B. King/Joe Josea's "Jungle." The album kicks into high gear on upbeat renditions of Sonny Boy Williamson's "Tryin' to Get Back on My Feet" and Tabby Thomas/Mark Dee's boogie-friendly "Hoodoo Party." Both of these benefit from spry guitar and piano work, and Meyers' exuberant vocal. Overall, the album also benefits from tight ensemble playing, a quality that undoubtedly comes from spending 300 days a year on the road together. For fans of Funderburgh's previous albums, and for anyone who enjoys electric blues, Which Way Is Texas? will prove a pleasing purchase.



  • whiskers
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