Richie Kotzen - 50 For 50 (2020)
Artist: Richie Kotzen
Title: 50 For 50
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Headroom-Inc 0013
Genre: Hard Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:16:070+01:06:41+01:02:09
Total Size: 1.4 GB / 470 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: 50 For 50
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Headroom-Inc 0013
Genre: Hard Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:16:070+01:06:41+01:02:09
Total Size: 1.4 GB / 470 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
CD1
01. Stick The Knife (4:54)
02. As You Are (4:39)
03. Dogs (3:46)
04. More Than This (3:50)
05. Dirty Tricks (4:08)
06. Nickel Hustler (5:45)
07. Devils Hand (7:39)
08. Mad Bazaar (3:34)
09. Turning The Table (6:19)
10. Already Scarred [Live] (3:33)
11. Black Mark (3:01)
12. Living The Dream (5:21)
13. When God Made You (3:48)
14. Wait For Me (4:53)
15. Life Gonna Give It To Ya (5:37)
16. Innocuous (5:18)
CD2
01. Radar (3:27)
02. Freeze (3:41)
03. Warrior (4:42)
04. Pray For Me (2:32)
05. Who I Am (5:41)
06. Last Laugh (4:42)
07. Taking On The Pain (3:31)
08. Feather Weights (4:01)
09. Going Back (3:42)
10. Happy Here (3:26)
11. Second Page (3:39)
12. Circus Song (2:47)
13. Trophy (3:53)
14. So Fast (4:46)
15. Deluxe (2:51)
16. Lay It On (3:23)
17. I Am The Clown (5:59)
CD3
01. Play The Field (3:31)
02. Wide Open (3:55)
03. Dark Places (4:08)
04. Miss My Girl (4:16)
05. My Cirlcles (3:11)
06. Edge Of The Earth (3:18)
07. Mountains (3:40)
08. Decree (4:19)
09. Same Old Town (3:39)
10. She's The Man (2:52)
11. Brother Brother (3:52)
12. July 14th (3:05)
13. Confession (4:58)
14. Hide From Me (3:55)
15. Let It Slide (2:47)
16. Breaking Off (3:27)
17. This House (3:15)
Turning 50 is a momentous occasion for anyone, but for guitar virtuoso Richie Kotzen, it was a challenge — a challenge to record 50 songs by his 50th birthday.
“I had a lot of material that I’d never released and didn’t know where it fit,” says Kotzen, who got the idea during a solo tour in 2019. “A huge portion [of the project] was songs I’d written but never finished — songs with guitar riffs and guide vocals and nothing else, or completed tracks with no lyrics. I went through them and thought, ‘When I get home, I’m going to start finishing them, and if I have 50 compositions that I love, I’ll put out a record on my 50th birthday to tie it all together.’ The reality is there’s way more than 50 and I had to stop myself before I lost my mind.”
The highly ambitious task was successfully completed, and the result is the three-disc 50 For 50, which was released today -- Kotzen’s birthday -- via his own label, Headroom-Inc. The gifted multi-instrumentalist wrote, performed, sang and produced virtually every song. “I get in the studio and start throwing things around, and before I know it it’s done, and I’m the only musician involved. That’s just the way I work,” he says.
Kotzen is likely best known for his stint in the glam-rock band Poison, replacing C.C. DeVille from 1991-1993 — and spent years trying to outrun the shadow of being in one of the biggest bands of the “hair metal” era. While casual fans may know him best as a hired-gun guitarist for the likes of Poison and Mr. Big, the prolific singer-songwriter has 22 solo albums under his belt (since debuting with the self-titled Richie Kotzen in 1989), including his latest.
“During the late ’90s and early 2000s, being associated with Poison was a nightmare,” he admits, noting that most major labels had “moved on” to rap and alternative rock. “The labels had tunnel vision and couldn’t figure out how to market me. So it was a difficult time for me, not because I didn’t make a good record with Poison [1993’s Native Tongue], but because of the perception of the gatekeepers in the music business. They just couldn’t see past it. But once the technology changed and I could release music without a label, everything started to turn in my favor. Now I’m where I should be.”
Indeed, 50 for 50 is a culmination of a 31-year career that weaves through Kotzen’s stylistic approach, incorporating traditional rock, progressive, soul, and plenty of guitar solos. A song that encapsulates the spirit of the album is the winding, seven-and-a-half-minute “Devil’s Hand.” The midtempo lead single, which features a three-minute guitar solo at the end, tackles loss and reflection.
“The lyrics are pretty self-explanatory,” says Kotzen. “Sometimes you just get too caught up in yourself and your own desires and really mess things up. Instead of being happy with what you have and what you’ve accomplished, you create problems out of boredom or greed. I think a lot of people ruin really great things and don’t realize it until it’s too late.”
In the video, which marks his directorial debut, Kotzen himself plays a down-and-out musician who remembers better days. “The video concept is what lead me to release this song first,” he says. “The song really tells a story, and in the last few minutes, it goes on such a journey compared with the typical approach of arranging a song”.
“I had a lot of material that I’d never released and didn’t know where it fit,” says Kotzen, who got the idea during a solo tour in 2019. “A huge portion [of the project] was songs I’d written but never finished — songs with guitar riffs and guide vocals and nothing else, or completed tracks with no lyrics. I went through them and thought, ‘When I get home, I’m going to start finishing them, and if I have 50 compositions that I love, I’ll put out a record on my 50th birthday to tie it all together.’ The reality is there’s way more than 50 and I had to stop myself before I lost my mind.”
The highly ambitious task was successfully completed, and the result is the three-disc 50 For 50, which was released today -- Kotzen’s birthday -- via his own label, Headroom-Inc. The gifted multi-instrumentalist wrote, performed, sang and produced virtually every song. “I get in the studio and start throwing things around, and before I know it it’s done, and I’m the only musician involved. That’s just the way I work,” he says.
Kotzen is likely best known for his stint in the glam-rock band Poison, replacing C.C. DeVille from 1991-1993 — and spent years trying to outrun the shadow of being in one of the biggest bands of the “hair metal” era. While casual fans may know him best as a hired-gun guitarist for the likes of Poison and Mr. Big, the prolific singer-songwriter has 22 solo albums under his belt (since debuting with the self-titled Richie Kotzen in 1989), including his latest.
“During the late ’90s and early 2000s, being associated with Poison was a nightmare,” he admits, noting that most major labels had “moved on” to rap and alternative rock. “The labels had tunnel vision and couldn’t figure out how to market me. So it was a difficult time for me, not because I didn’t make a good record with Poison [1993’s Native Tongue], but because of the perception of the gatekeepers in the music business. They just couldn’t see past it. But once the technology changed and I could release music without a label, everything started to turn in my favor. Now I’m where I should be.”
Indeed, 50 for 50 is a culmination of a 31-year career that weaves through Kotzen’s stylistic approach, incorporating traditional rock, progressive, soul, and plenty of guitar solos. A song that encapsulates the spirit of the album is the winding, seven-and-a-half-minute “Devil’s Hand.” The midtempo lead single, which features a three-minute guitar solo at the end, tackles loss and reflection.
“The lyrics are pretty self-explanatory,” says Kotzen. “Sometimes you just get too caught up in yourself and your own desires and really mess things up. Instead of being happy with what you have and what you’ve accomplished, you create problems out of boredom or greed. I think a lot of people ruin really great things and don’t realize it until it’s too late.”
In the video, which marks his directorial debut, Kotzen himself plays a down-and-out musician who remembers better days. “The video concept is what lead me to release this song first,” he says. “The song really tells a story, and in the last few minutes, it goes on such a journey compared with the typical approach of arranging a song”.
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Richie Kotzen - 50 For 50 (2020)
Richie Kotzen - 50 For 50 (2020)mp3
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Richie Kotzen - 50 For 50 (2020)
Richie Kotzen - 50 For 50 (2020)mp3
My blog