Blues Traveler - Truth Be Told (2003) FLAC
Artist: Blues Traveler
Title: Truth Be Told
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Sanctuary Records
Genre: Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:47:38
Total Size: 335 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Truth Be Told
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Sanctuary Records
Genre: Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:47:38
Total Size: 335 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Blues Traveler - Unable to Get Free
02. Blues Traveler - Eventually (I'll Come Around)
03. Blues Traveler - Sweet and Broken
04. Blues Traveler - My Blessed Pain
05. Blues Traveler - Let Her and Let Go
06. Blues Traveler - Thinnest of Air
07. Blues Traveler - Can't See Why
08. Blues Traveler - Stumble and Fall
09. Blues Traveler - This Ache
10. Blues Traveler - Mount Normal
11. Blues Traveler - The One
12. Blues Traveler - Partner In Crime
Bridge, Blues Traveler's 2001 release, was appropriate. It was definitely a stylistic return to form after the disappointing Straight on Till Morning. But Bridge also brought BT back to the world after the death of bassist Bob Sheehan and John Popper's bouts with illness. Truth Be Told builds on that momentum, telescoping the veteran combo's sound, history, and experience both good and bad ones into a strong twelve-song set. There's radio-friendly material here - "Sweet and Broken"; "My Blessed Pain" but these aren't sequels to the cleansed bop of "Runaround." Instead, they click on clever wordplay from Popper and Chan Kinchla's crackling little guitar parts. New keyboardist Ben Wilson is invaluable throughout Truth; his rhythmic lines and well-placed solo moments are so effortlessly integrated, it's difficult to remember a Blues Traveler without keys. His organ kicks off one of the album's more exploratory moments. "Thinnest of Air" sounds like sped-up dub reggae, unspooling threads of trippy atmosphere without killing the track's relentless drive. And while the presence of Wilson's piano and organ does eat into Popper's harmonica parts a bit, "Can't See Why" still has room for one of those tongue workout harp freakouts. At the same time, it's also one of the album's rawest songs, toasting the band's jammy and vibrant live sound without spinning into a laborious tangent of aimless soloing. "Unable to Get Free" and "Let Her & Let Go" are album highlights. Both cuts combine big, boisterous choruses with sinewy songcraft that contracts or expands with the band's inspired, focused playing. There's groove here, and it's a bluesy, tour-tested one. But there are also easily accessible melodies and whip-smart lyrics. Comfortably ensconced at Sanctuary, and oblivious to any worries about follow-up singles or Platinum records, Blues Traveler has made something that quietly and confidently has the potential for both.