David Serby - I Just Don't Go Home (2006)

  • 22 Jun, 17:41
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Artist:
Title: I Just Don't Go Home
Year Of Release: 2006
Label: David Serby
Genre: Country
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:38:33
Total Size: 249 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Red Lipstick and French Perfume
02. Santa Ana Winds
03. Dirt Beneath My Nails
04. I Just Don't Go Home
05. Solitaire
06. Down to the Felt
07. I Learned My Lesson
08. Cannonball Trail
09. Do You Feel Lucky Tonight?
10. Our Last Resort
11. Crooked Little Smile
12. The Day That We Moved In

California - principally from Bakersfield and south - has long bred roots rockers who favor a lean but muscular approach. It's a line that zig-zags from Ritchie Valens to Buck Owens to X to Dwight Yoakam. David Serby continues this fine tradition. In fact, his debut disc suggests what the Blasters might have liked if they favored country more than R&B. The toe-tapping twang-a-billy lead-off track "Red Lipstick and French Perfume" could easily fit in on a Blasters CD. Serby's vocals very strongly recall Phil Alvin's country croon, although his voice has a softer, gentler side. This quality increases the sense of vulnerability in his heartache-filled songs like the cheater's tale "I Learned My Lesson" and the gambler's saga "Down to the Felt." His working man's ode "Dirt Beneath My Nails" might not be as gritty as a Dave Alvin effort but it holds a nice nostalgic feel. Similarly, the quietly wistful "Cannonball Trail" takes a fond look back at childhood. What separates Serby from the typical honky tonking roots rocker is his sharp songwriting skills. He displays a real talent for turning a phrase without turning it into country clichés. On the title track, he sings: "the California King's too big for one man all alone" to concisely yet vividly portray a man's loneliness and, in another song, he comes with the memorable metaphor: "It's time we cut this deck in two/'cause we've been playing Solitaire" to describe a crumbling marriage. His excellent lyric writing also is prominently showcased on the disc's closer "The Day That We Moved In" where he compares a couple's last day together in a house with the day that they moved in. Serby is well served here by producer/multi-instrumentalist Ed Tree and his veteran backing crew (including Skip Edwards and Jay Dee Maness) but they mainly just stand back and let Serby shine brightly on his confident, impressive debut.