Corb Lund - Five Dollar Bill (Dark Horse Edition) (2025)

Artist: Corb Lund
Title: Five Dollar Bill (Dark Horse Edition)
Year Of Release: 2002 / 2025
Label: New West Records, LLC
Genre: Country
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 41:11
Total Size: 355 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Five Dollar Bill (Dark Horse Edition)
Year Of Release: 2002 / 2025
Label: New West Records, LLC
Genre: Country
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 41:11
Total Size: 355 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Corb Lund – Five Dollar Bill (02:33)
2. Corb Lund – Expectation and the Blues (02:56)
3. Corb Lund – Short Native Grasses (Prairies of Alberta) (03:46)
4. Corb Lund – No Roads Here (03:21)
5. Corb Lund – Apocalyptic Modified Blues (03:03)
6. Corb Lund – Heavy and Leaving (03:25)
7. Corb Lund – Intro/Jack of Diamonds (00:36)
8. Corb Lund – Time to Switch to Whiskey (02:53)
9. Corb Lund – Roughest Neck Around (03:12)
10. Corb Lund – Daughter Don’t You Marry No Guitar Picker (02:23)
11. Corb Lund – (Gonna) Shine Up My Boots (02:13)
12. Corb Lund – Buckin’ Horse Rider (03:34)
13. Corb Lund – She Won’t Come to Me (03:45)
14. Corb Lund – No Roads Here (Dark Horse Acoustic) (03:25)
Five Dollar Bill was originally released in 2003, and is now going to be widely available on vinyl for the first time. This record includes songs that are staples in Corb Lund’s live set, such as “(Gonna) Shine Up My Boots” and “Time to Switch to Whiskey.” In addition to these lively jams, Five Dollar Bill features everything from romantic imagery of Corb’s homeland, “Short Native Grasses (Prairies of Alberta),” to songs that give the listener a glimpse into the life of working class folks, such as “Roughest Neck Around” which is an ode to oil riggers and the grit that is required with that lifestyle. “‘Five Dollar Bill’ was a big milestone for me for lots of reasons. It was my first record after my metal band, The Smalls, broke up and it’s when I got really serious about western music. I really dove into my family’s cowboy ancestry and my very rural upbringing in this batch of songs. It was also our first record of many produced by Harry Stinson who is now a very close friend, and our first brush with Nashville, Tennessee, as we recorded half the record down there. It was our last record with Ryan Vikedal on the drums before he flew off into fame and fortune with Nickelback. It was also our last record as a trio. It was my first gold album,” says Lund, “And we are still playing lots of these songs at our shows. It really defined my path forward as a western songwriter and helped lay the foundation for my whole career. I wrote a bunch of it holed up in a dingy room in the Brooks Hotel in Alberta.”