Dirk Hamilton - The Relative Health of Your Horse Outside (2010)

Artist: Dirk Hamilton
Title: The Relative Health of Your Horse Outside
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Horizons
Genre: Folk, Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 01:28:45
Total Size: 219/672 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Relative Health of Your Horse Outside
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Horizons
Genre: Folk, Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 01:28:45
Total Size: 219/672 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
CD 1:
01. Overcoats (Live)
02. The Sweet Forever (Live)
03. Grow a Rose (Live)
04. The Light of Love (Live)
05. Black Dog Blues (Live)
06. Billboard on the Moon (Live)
07. I Will Acquiesce (Live)
08. The Relative Health of Your Soul Inside (Live)
CD 2:
01. In the Eyes of the Night (Live)
02. On a Volcano (Live)
03. The Main Attraction (Live)
04. Colder Than Mexican Snow (Live)
05. The Bob Crane Memorial Band (Live)
06. Alias I (Live)
07. Askin' for Apples (Live)
Dirk Hamilton has always brought a folksinger's literacy, a rocker's edge, and a somewhat skewed point of view to his records, and Sexspringeverything, though slightly less quirky than his early work, follows suit. Twenty-five years after the release of his debut for ABC Records, Hamilton displays an intelligence and insight that only comes with experience. Amidst the highs and lows, wants and needs, and failed plans of life, he seems at once content, yet driven; skeptical, yet hopeful; and uncertain, yet full of faith. And while musically there's nothing fashionable, or even necessarily new here, there is an unmistakably unique style, built around Hamilton's rhythm guitar, raspy tenor, and inventive phrasing, that is clearly his own. Throughout, Hamilton and his first-rate band -- featuring co-producer Bradley Kopp's lead guitar and former Spirit, Firefall, and Heart bassist Mark Andes -- infuse the album with a classic feel that, like his songs, sneaks up on you a little more with each listen. Songs such as "You Taught Me How to Love (Now I Can Love)," "Better Off Live," the tender "Hey Tyrette," and the record's best track, "Myth and Disguise," display the maturity and passion of a man who has been around but still sees this as the "...time of [his] life...." His first new recording in nearly five years, Sexspringeverything is another strong outing from a true original, in a time when too many veterans of the '70s singer/songwriter school have become tiresome, slick, and repetitious.