Will Hoge - Draw the Curtains (2007)

  • 05 Nov, 18:38
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Artist:
Title: Draw the Curtains
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Ryko - WEA
Genre: Blues Rock, Southern Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:41:15
Total Size: 258 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. When I Can Afford to Lose
02. These Were the Days
03. Dirty Little War
04. Silver or Gold
05. Sex, Lies and Money
06. I'm Sorry Now
07. Midnight Parade
08. Draw the Curtains
09. Washed by the Water
10. The Highway's Home

In early 2006, Americans were captivated by the Southern soul croonings of Taylor Hicks, a modern-day bluesman who rose to fame via the well-oiled American Idol machine. Meanwhile, the similarly styled Will Hoge was busy touring America's smoky barroom circuit, inciting his audiences to alternately weep into their whiskeys and hit the dancefloor. It was a routine that the Nashville-based artist was used to, having left the Atlantic Records roster several years prior to pursue life as an independent road warrior. Perhaps that's why his first offering on the Rykodisc label, Draw the Curtains, boasts the sort of informed authenticity that American Idol finalists can only seem to muster several years into their post-TV career.
This is an album of countrified, bloodshot-eyed soul -- a difficult genre to execute, perhaps, but one that Hoge often nails. His vocals crack on cue and climb the treble clef like scaffolding, channeling Otis Redding one moment before veering into Joe Cocker territory the next. "Barroom fights and breaking glass, broken nose and a smoker's laugh; I'm sure I probably cut my life in half," Hoge sings on "The Highway's Home," a hint of vibrato coloring his lyrics. The track is one of Curtains' most overtly country numbers, complete with pedal steel guitar and a midtempo gait, but its rawness still stands against the spit-shine polish of many Nashville products. Where Hoge truly sets himself apart from those hometown contemporaries, though, is the album's early half -- specifically "When I Can Afford to Lose," "Dirty Little War," and "Silver or Gold," all of which revel in the sort of barroom rock & roll that's tailor-made for heartaches and hangovers. Hoge's second record contract may put him back in the big leagues, but his heart still rests in the concert venues and watering holes that have housed him over the years.

  • whiskers
  •  18:51
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  21:36
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Many thanks for Flac.
  • Blackdog52
  •  16:12
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Thank you very much