Chris Knight - The Jealous Kind (2003)
Artist: Chris Knight
Title: The Jealous Kind
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Dualtone
Genre: Folk Rock, Blues, Country
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 45:40
Total Size: 112/295 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Jealous Kind
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Dualtone
Genre: Folk Rock, Blues, Country
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 45:40
Total Size: 112/295 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. The Jealous Kind
02. Banging Away
03. The Border
04. Staying Up All Night Long
05. A Train Not Running
06. Carla Came Home
07. Me And This Road
08. Broken Plow
09. Devil Behind The Wheel
10. Hello Old Man
11. Long Black Highway
Line-up:
Acoustic Guitar – Chris Knight, Joe Hardy
Bass – Keith Christopher
Drums – Greg Morrow
Guitar – Bob Britt, Dan Baird, Ty Tyler
Producer – Dan Baird, Joe Hardy
Country singer-songwriter from Slaughters, Kentucky.
Chris Knight doesn't like to say much. Won't chat about his worldview or engage in conversations on his creative approach. For 14 years, 7 acclaimed albums and a hard-nosed career that's been hailed as "where Cormac McCarthy meets Copperhead Road", Knight has always let his music do most of the talking. His first album of new material in 4 years, Little Victories is a record of blunt honesty, elegiac truths, and the raw rural poetry of an artist who's come into his own and intends to stay. And for a performer who's been compared over the years to Cash, Prine, Earle, and Nebraska-era Springsteen, Knight now stands alone as a singer/songwriter that has carved his own idiosyncratic sound and sensibility out of the dirt road American dream. LIttle Victories not only sounds like a Chris Knight album, but the best Chris Knight album yet.
Chris Knight doesn't like to say much. Won't chat about his worldview or engage in conversations on his creative approach. For 14 years, 7 acclaimed albums and a hard-nosed career that's been hailed as "where Cormac McCarthy meets Copperhead Road", Knight has always let his music do most of the talking. His first album of new material in 4 years, Little Victories is a record of blunt honesty, elegiac truths, and the raw rural poetry of an artist who's come into his own and intends to stay. And for a performer who's been compared over the years to Cash, Prine, Earle, and Nebraska-era Springsteen, Knight now stands alone as a singer/songwriter that has carved his own idiosyncratic sound and sensibility out of the dirt road American dream. LIttle Victories not only sounds like a Chris Knight album, but the best Chris Knight album yet.