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Three Free Amigos
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Three Free Amigos
Current price: $11.99
Barnes and Noble
Three Free Amigos
Current price: $11.99
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Three Free Amigos
is the most curious record in
Anders Osborne
's catalog. Released less than a year after his scorching
Black Eye Galaxy
, this EP contains six songs recorded in NOLA, co-produced by the artist with
Warren Riker
(who also engineered the set). These are informal, mostly brief tunes -- the entire offering is a shade over 25 minutes -- performed in relaxed fashion by
Osborne
and his road band with some friends (who include the gifted vocalist
Maggie Koerner
). There are four new songs, an older one that's never been recorded, and a new version of "Never Is a Real Long Time" from 1999's
Living Room
. The new tunes were written in the aftermath of
. The title track is one of
's excellent story-songs, driven by his electric guitar that underscores his and
Koerner
's vocals. A midtempo rocker, it eventually gives way to a longer, spooky, snaky blues jam with his slide guitar playing emerging at the fore as
Michael Burkhardt
's B-3 offers its own atmospheric tinge. "Marmalade" is a cheerful, drenched-in-sunshine reggae tune, accented by dubwise effects. "Jealous Love" is an acoustic take on
Bo Diddley
's signature riff but offers an excellent lyric. "It's Gonna Be OK" is a minor-key Americana ballad that would be right at home in a
Neil Young
songbook. Resonator and acoustic guitars, shuffling drums, and a hooky refrain carry it, while
's voice in the margins haunts the instrumental passage on slow boil. The new reading of "Never Is a Real Long Time" is better in this stripped-down setting.
proves (again) that he is underrated as a vocalist. Even with a limited range, his grainy baritone is able to express emotional depth with the subtlest of nuances. With
joining him on the refrain, the generosity in the song's subject takes on a poignant resonance. Closer "We Move On" is a simple acoustic singalong, but the brief harmonica and bells remove it -- ever so slightly -- from its back-porch roots into something more textural and open.
is a curiosity, because other than the laid-back, informal vibe applied here, nothing ties these songs together -- a true anomaly for an
record. That's far from a bad thing. This is a thoroughly enjoyable way to spend 25 minutes, and is an excellent, intimate aural glimpse into
the songwriter rather than the guitar hero. ~ Thom Jurek
is the most curious record in
Anders Osborne
's catalog. Released less than a year after his scorching
Black Eye Galaxy
, this EP contains six songs recorded in NOLA, co-produced by the artist with
Warren Riker
(who also engineered the set). These are informal, mostly brief tunes -- the entire offering is a shade over 25 minutes -- performed in relaxed fashion by
Osborne
and his road band with some friends (who include the gifted vocalist
Maggie Koerner
). There are four new songs, an older one that's never been recorded, and a new version of "Never Is a Real Long Time" from 1999's
Living Room
. The new tunes were written in the aftermath of
. The title track is one of
's excellent story-songs, driven by his electric guitar that underscores his and
Koerner
's vocals. A midtempo rocker, it eventually gives way to a longer, spooky, snaky blues jam with his slide guitar playing emerging at the fore as
Michael Burkhardt
's B-3 offers its own atmospheric tinge. "Marmalade" is a cheerful, drenched-in-sunshine reggae tune, accented by dubwise effects. "Jealous Love" is an acoustic take on
Bo Diddley
's signature riff but offers an excellent lyric. "It's Gonna Be OK" is a minor-key Americana ballad that would be right at home in a
Neil Young
songbook. Resonator and acoustic guitars, shuffling drums, and a hooky refrain carry it, while
's voice in the margins haunts the instrumental passage on slow boil. The new reading of "Never Is a Real Long Time" is better in this stripped-down setting.
proves (again) that he is underrated as a vocalist. Even with a limited range, his grainy baritone is able to express emotional depth with the subtlest of nuances. With
joining him on the refrain, the generosity in the song's subject takes on a poignant resonance. Closer "We Move On" is a simple acoustic singalong, but the brief harmonica and bells remove it -- ever so slightly -- from its back-porch roots into something more textural and open.
is a curiosity, because other than the laid-back, informal vibe applied here, nothing ties these songs together -- a true anomaly for an
record. That's far from a bad thing. This is a thoroughly enjoyable way to spend 25 minutes, and is an excellent, intimate aural glimpse into
the songwriter rather than the guitar hero. ~ Thom Jurek