Rodney_Crowell-Sex_And_Gasoline-(Advance)-2008-FMseeders: 2
leechers: 0
Rodney_Crowell-Sex_And_Gasoline-(Advance)-2008-FM (Size: 57.32 MB)
Description
+----------------+------------------------------------------+----------------+
| | | Artist : Rodney Crowell | | Album : Sex And Gasoline-(Advance) | | Bitrate : VBR kbps | | | +-------------------------------[Release Info]-------------------------------+ | | | Label : Yep Roc | | Year : 2008 | | Genre : Country | | Rip date : Aug-14-2008 | | Store date : Sep-02-2008 | | Size : 57,3 MB | | | +--------------------------------[Track List]--------------------------------+ | | |Track Listing: | | | | 01 - Sex And Gasoline 04:29 | | 02 - Moving Work Of Art 04:31 | | 03 - The Rise And Fall Of Intelligent Design 04:29 | | 04 - Truth Decay 04:30 | | 05 - I Want You #35 03:31 | | 06 - I've Done Everything I Can 05:34 | | 07 - Who Do You Trust 04:08 | | 08 - The Night's Just Right 03:52 | | 09 - Funky And The Farm Boy 04:09 | | 10 - Forty Winters 04:44 | | 11 - Closer To Heaven 05:20 | | | | ÄÄÄÄÄ | | 49:17 min | | | +-------------------------------[Release Notes]------------------------------+ | | | While Rodney Crowell first gained widespread recognition as a leader of | | the new traditionalist movement of the mid-'80s, he in fact was a | | singer, songwriter, and producer with roots and ambitions extending far | | beyond the movement's parameters. Born to a musical family on August 7, | | 1950, in Houston, TX, Crowell formed his first band, the Arbitrators, | | while in high school, and in 1972 moved to Nashville to become a | | professional musician. There, he struck up friendships with | | singer/songwriters Townes Van Zandt and Guy Clark. | | | | Crowell's first big break came while he was performing as a lounge | | singer, where one of his acoustic sets was heard by Jerry Reed. | | Crowell's own "You Can't Keep Me Here in Tennessee" caught the ear of | | Reed and his manager, and two days later Reed recorded the song after | | signing Crowell to his publishing company. In 1975, Crowell moved to Los | | Angeles to join Emmylou Harris' Hot Band as a guitarist, and soon became | | one of her primary songwriters; among the Crowell compositions Harris | | first popularized were "Till I Gain Control Again," "Ain't Livin' Long | | Like This," "Leaving Louisiana in the Broad Daylight," and "Bluebird | | Wine." In 1977, Crowell exited the Hot Band to form his own group, the | | Cherry Bombs, and in 1978 released his first album, Ain't Living Long | | Like This; surprisingly, given that he had built his growing reputation | | as a songwriter, his first two minor hits — "Elvira" and "(Now and Then, | | There's) A Fool Such as I" — were both covers. | | | | Also in 1978, Crowell began producing tracks for the album Right or | | Wrong, the American debut from singer/songwriter Rosanne Cash; around | | the time of the record's 1979 release, he and Cash married. In between | | recording his own 1980 sophomore record, But What Will the Neighbors | | Think, and producing Cash's commercial breakthrough Seven Year Ache, | | Crowell's songwriting career took full flight when "Leavin' Louisiana in | | the Broad Daylight" hit number one for the Oak Ridge Boys in 1980. Among | | his other significant compositions were "Till I Gain Control Again" (a | | number one for Crystal Gayle in 1983), "Shame on the Moon" (a Top Five | | pop hit for Bob Seger in 1982), "Long Hard Road (The Sharecropper's | | Dream)" (a 1984 number one for the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band), and | | "Somewhere Tonight" (a number one in 1987 for Highway 101). | | | | In 1980, Crowell issued his own first hit, "Ashes by Now," which was a | | Top 40 pop crossover success; the follow-up, "Stars on the Water," was | | popular with both pop and country listeners. In 1981, he issued his | | third LP, a self-titled effort which was not commercially successful; | | when a fourth effort was rejected by his label, he turned his energies | | to writing and producing, most significantly helming Cash's 1987 | | masterpiece King's Record Shop. At Cash's urging, Crowell reignited his | | performing career in 1986 with the acclaimed Street Language, an | | eclectic effort co-produced by Memphis soul legend Booker T. Jones. | | | | In 1988, Crowell finally broke through commercially with Diamonds & | | Dirt, a record which generated an unbroken string of five number one | | singles with "It's Such a Small World" (a duet with Cash), "I Couldn't | | Leave You If I Tried," "She's Crazy for Leavin'" (co-written by Guy | | Clark), "After All This Time," and "Above and Beyond." Keys to the | | Highway was also highly successful. | | | | Crowell and Cash divorced in 1991, prompting both artists to document | | their marriage's dissolution with starkly confessional albums; Crowell's | | 1992 Life Is Messy featured guests Steve Winwood and Linda Ronstadt. | | Switching to MCA Records for Let the Picture Paint Itself in 1994, he | | followed with Jewel of the South the next year. In 1997, he formed the | | Cicadas with longtime backup musicians Steuart Smith, Michael Rhodes, | | and Vince Santoro. He married singer Claudia Church in 1998, and in 1999 | | wrote her country chart debut, "'What's the Matter with You Baby." | | Crowell issued his first album since 1995, The Houston Kid, in 2001. | | Continuing in the autobiographical vein of that record, he released | | Fate's Right Hand in 2003, followed by The Outsider in 2005. | | | +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ Sharing Widget |