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Leftover Feelings [Signed Edition] [Black Splatter Vinyl] [B&N Exclusive]
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Barnes and Noble
Leftover Feelings [Signed Edition] [Black Splatter Vinyl] [B&N Exclusive]
Current price: $12.79
Barnes and Noble
Leftover Feelings [Signed Edition] [Black Splatter Vinyl] [B&N Exclusive]
Current price: $12.79
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Size: CD
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One of the unspoken rules of the music business is that you can age out of rock & roll, but you're allowed to show your age in blues and country if you do it right. The blues have always been a good match for the gritty, eloquent sneer of
's voice, and he's been more than willing to push himself in that direction in his recordings of the 2010s and onward, as the celebrated singer/songwriter, born in 1952, moves further from the sell-by date of most rock and pop artists. On 2021's
,
has blended his bluesy sensibilities with a subtle country feel, though he clearly feels no alliance with the beer-and-pickup trucks mindset of Nashville's current hitmakers.
recorded
with
, led by
, arguably the world's best and certainly most influential dobro player. Though
adds occasional flashes of electric guitar to the mix, this is otherwise an acoustic session which, as is the tradition in bluegrass, features no drums. The music is not bluegrass in either concept or execution ("All the Lilacs in Ohio" comes close), even though that's the path
and his bandmates usually walk; instead,
and
use the group's tonal palette to reflect the themes and emotions of
's songwriting, with the band deferring to the needs of the material rather than their past musical associations. And even when the music isn't truly blues or bluegrass,
knows how to draw the rootsy sensibilities of his songs to the surface (they're never buried especially deep anyway), and the subtle virtuosity of
, bassist
, and fiddler
is a superb match for
's songs and lead vocals. After two decades of
's reliable excellence in songwriting,
does nothing to break this streak; the opening track "Long Black Electric Cadillac" is witty but a bit gimmicky, but the lonely wandering of "I'm in Asheville," the tragic family story of "Light of the Burning Sun," and the bittersweet introspection of "Changes in my Mind" are the work of a masterful tunesmith with faultless instincts about how to deliver his material.
isn't "
's Acoustic Album," it's a solid and rewarding set of songs that sounds a bit different than usual, but finds him working with some excellent and simpatico musicians who understand his craft and play into the feel of
's material. ~ Mark Deming