Tami Neilson - Dynamite! (2014)

  • 16 Jun, 15:43
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Artist:
Title: Dynamite!
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Southbound Records
Genre: Country, Americana
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue, log)
Total Time: 28:52
Total Size: 170 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01 - Walk (Back To Your Arms)
02 - Come Over
03 - Texas
04 - Cry Over You
05 - You Lie
06 - Dynamite
07 - Woo Hoo
08 - Running To You
09 - Honey Girl
10 - Whiskey And Kisses

Audiences across the globe have heard and been enchanted by the golden voice of Tami Neilson. Singing her heart out across endless roads and stages, from her days as a young girl in the touring Neilson family band to her full blossoming as a formidable talent in her own right, Tami has won award after award for her songs and her singing and impressed critics and musicians alike with her hard work and attention to detail.

Her pure tones remind us of a time gone by where the vocalist was a songbird transporting us to places we could never go, showing us worlds we could only imagine.

Her skill at writing and crafting a song is shown here in the dynamic range of music you are about to hear. Moving easily through blues driven numbers like “Walk (Back To Your Arms)” and “Dynamite”, Tami showcases new facets in the jewel, her soulful side with “Cry Over You” and her maple-sweetness in “Honey Girl”, before she kicks it up with rockin numbers like “Woo Hoo” and “Come Over”. Those familiar with her previous work will be happy to hear the country lament “You Lie” and her bell-like “Texas”, keeping one foot squarely planted in the country corner.

A couple of duets appear here on the album: young Marlon Williams leaves us breathless while matching Tami word for word in the fun and frantic "Woo Hoo", Ben Woolley croons with the heartbreak of a spurned suitor in "Whiskey & Kisses", while fellow hayrider Delaney Davidson's worries are kissed away in “Running To You”.

Steel-playing wizard, Red McKelvie, came out of retirement to play on the songs after he heard the demos, and the highly-sought-after skills of Dave Khan are sprinkled beautifully, adding body and a touch of the cinematic. The rhythm section of Joe McCallum and Ben Woolley round the sound out to form the makings of a classic.


  • whiskers
  •  19:13
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  14:26
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Many thanks for lossless!!