Authentic Unlimited - So Much For Forever (2024)

  • 05 Apr, 09:48
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Artist:
Title: So Much For Forever
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Billy Blue Records
Genre: Country, Bluegrass
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 42:57
Total Size: 104/287 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Big Wheels 2:56
02. Goodbye 3:28
03. Ain't Got Time 3:48
04. Praying for the Night 3:43
05. Fall in Tennessee 3:49
06. A Drive at Dusk 3:44
07. Ruby Ann 3:56
08. Benfield Line 3:28
09. I Can't Let Go 3:35
10. Misty Vale Intro 0:43
11. Misty Vale 3:20
12. Second to None 3:11
13. Reflection 3:16

It is extremely rare for a record company to release two albums by the same artist simultaneously, but that is precisely what Billy Blue Records has done with Authentic Unlimited’s two new projects, and for the second time! Today we get one gospel and one secular: Gospel Sessions, Vol. 2 and So Much For Forever. It’s a good call since this award-winning quintet is one of the hottest new bands on the bluegrass circuit.

Authentic Unlimited formed two years ago when Doyle Lawson retired, and three members of his band, Quicksilver – Eli Johnston on banjo, Stephen Burwell on fiddle, and Jerry Cole on bass – joined forces with mandolin extraordinaire, Jesse Brock, and young relative newcomer guitarist/vocalist, John Meador. Out of the gate, that combination of talent landed them a recording contract with Billy Blue Records and they started racking up awards including Vocal Group of the Year and New Artist of the Year at the 2023 IBMA Bluegrass Music Awards, on top of Vocal Group and Gospel Group at 2024 SPBGMA Awards. Collectively, these five gentlemen, vocally and instrumentally, are hard to beat. The combination of their skills on these two new projects is a true reflection of what they do best: compose, sing, and pick.

Gospel Sessions, Vol. 2 follows their 2022 Vol. 1 project. It is wise marketing to release a series of albums, alerting the consumer that more is to come, much the way the Seldom Scene did with their Acts I-IV records in the 1970s. This project offers 12 gospel numbers, five of which are the band’s originals. Two of the tunes, Come on In and Won’t It Be Wonderful, were penned by Bill Turner (brother to the late Buster Turner of the Pinnacle Mountain Boys who wrote Altar of Prayer that Lawson recorded). Bill had a special connection with Cole by singing and playing mandolin in his dad’s group, Better Way Quartet, for around 30 years.

The album offers a variety of styles of music that is sure to please listeners from Cole’s To the Cross with a Louvin Brothers-impacted duet to the band’s original western swing number, Wings of Love, to revamping The Cry from the Cross and Memories of Home to a couple of a cappella tunes, Help Me Endure and Written Up There. Personal favorites of this reviewer are Thank You Lord for Grace that has that distinctive Lawson influence, and Won’t It Be Wonderful, which concludes with a stratospheric ending.

In addition to their obvious vocal prowess, the group offers solid instrumentation with Johnston’s hard-driving banjo, Brock’s flawless mandolin breaks and tasteful back-up, Meador’s melodic guitar work, and Cole’s solid bass laying the foundation. Burwell shines on the fiddle, doing some beautiful twin work. Now if he can just clone himself to do it live!





  • whiskers
  •  12:45
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