Guy Forsyth - The Freedom To Fail (2012)
Artist: Guy Forsyth
Title: The Freedom To Fail
Year Of Release: 2012
Label: Small and Nimble Records, Blue Corn Music
Genre: Blues Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 49:46
Total Size: 151/370 Mb (booklet)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: The Freedom To Fail
Year Of Release: 2012
Label: Small and Nimble Records, Blue Corn Music
Genre: Blues Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 49:46
Total Size: 151/370 Mb (booklet)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Red Dirt
02. The Hard Way
03. Sink 'Em Low (The Holler)
04. The Things That Matter
05. Econoline
06. Can't Stop Dancing
07. Balance
08. Thank You For My Hands
09. Played Again
10. Should Have Been Raining
11. Old Time Man
12. Home To Me
Austin, Texas-based musician, singer, storyteller, and songwriter.
Blues made him want to play. Forsyth’s first works were electric, raw blues that held nothing back. When he showed up in Austin, he had with him a bandolier of Harmonicas and a carnival barkers voice that could cut through the noise of the busiest night on Sixth street.
In 1999 Forsyth & Artie Gold recorded their recorded first Blues album,”Scalpel & Sledgehammer” on cassette tape. “It was recorded at Erik Blakley’s home studio (for $8 an hour), where Artie produced, recorded and paid for it all himself,” said Forsyth. “We sold it at gigs, took some to the Antone’s record shop, there might be a couple still there. I was the Sledgehammer.”
Blues made him want to play. Forsyth’s first works were electric, raw blues that held nothing back. When he showed up in Austin, he had with him a bandolier of Harmonicas and a carnival barkers voice that could cut through the noise of the busiest night on Sixth street.
In 1999 Forsyth & Artie Gold recorded their recorded first Blues album,”Scalpel & Sledgehammer” on cassette tape. “It was recorded at Erik Blakley’s home studio (for $8 an hour), where Artie produced, recorded and paid for it all himself,” said Forsyth. “We sold it at gigs, took some to the Antone’s record shop, there might be a couple still there. I was the Sledgehammer.”