Joe Walsh - But Seriously Folks... (Japan SHM Remaster 2017) (1978)

Artist: Joe Walsh
Title: But Seriously Folks...
Year Of Release: 1978/2017
Label: Asylum Records
Genre: Classic Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, ,cue, log)
Total Time: 35:22
Total Size: 416 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: But Seriously Folks...
Year Of Release: 1978/2017
Label: Asylum Records
Genre: Classic Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, ,cue, log)
Total Time: 35:22
Total Size: 416 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Over And Over - 4:53
2. Second Hand Store (Joe Walsh, Mike Murphy) - 3:35
3. Indian Summer - 3:03
4. At The Station (Joe Vitale, Joe Walsh) - 5:09
5. Tomorrow - 3:39
6. Inner Tube - 1:25
7. Theme From Boat Weirdos (Bill Szymczyk, Jay Ferguson, Joe Vitale, Joe Walsh, Willie Weeks) - 4:42
8. Life's Been Good - 8:56
Joe Walsh - Guitars, Synthesizers
Joe Vitale - Drums, Percussion, Flute, Synthesizer,
Jay Ferguson - Keyboards, Background Vocals
Willie Weeks - Bass
Joey Murcia - 2nd Guitar
Don Felder - Pedal Steel, Vocals (Track 2), Guitar, Vocals (Track 4)
Bill Szymczyk – Tambourine, Vocals (Track 4), Background Vocals (Track 8)
Jody Boyer - Background Vocals (Tracks 2,3,8)
Don Henley - Background Vocals (Track 5)
Glenn Frey - Background Vocals (Track 5)
Timothy B. Schmit - Background Vocals (Track 5)
As far as studio albums go, But Seriously Folks is Joe Walsh's most insightful and melodic. But Seriously Folks, released in 1978, was the album the Eagles should have made rather than the mediocre The Long Run. It captures a reflective song cycle along the same thematic lines of Pet Sounds, only for the '70s. The album's introspective outlook glides through rejuvenation ("Tomorrow," "Over and Over"), recapturing the simple pleasures of the past ("Indian Summer"), mid-career indecision ("At the Station," "Second Hand Store"), and a melancholy instrumental ("Theme From Boat Weirdos"). The disc's finale, "Life's Been Good," is a sarcastic and bittersweet ode to Walsh's "rock star-party guy" persona which reached the Top 10 on the pop charts and became a staple of FM rock radio. The only way But Seriously Folks could have been improved, was to include "In the City," essentially solo Walsh, which unfortunately ended up on The Long Run instead.~Al Campbell