Bitrate: 320K/s
Year: 2008
Time: 51:25
Size: 118,1 MB
Label: Dialtone Records
Styles: Blues
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Lady Pearl's Cut You Loose - 2:57
2. Never Make Your Move Too Soon - 3:44
3. Woke Up This Morning - 3:49
4. Look'n for the Blues - 3:47
5. Lucy Mae Blues - 3:17
6. I Love You Baby - 3:39
7. Two Trains Running - 4:36
8. Have You Ever Loved a Woman - 4:38
9. Bad Sad - 3:12
10. Boogie Chillen - 3:06
11. Wonder Why - 3:07
12. Trust Me - 3:33
13. Maypearl Rose - 4:13
14. Key to the Highway - 3:40
With a sound that's raw and raucous, Fort Worth bluesman Ray Reed cuts to the chase, eschewing any notions of pretension. With a half-century of paid dues under his belt, the singer/guitarist lays down the type of hardscrabble blues you'd find in a Saturday night roadhouse out on the Jacksborough Highway. It's the kind of unadulterated sound we've come to expect from Austin's Dialtone Records. Reed's handful of funky originals, including "Look'n for the Blues" and "Trust Me," stands up well next to choice covers of B.B. King, Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, and Frankie Lee Sims. Joining Reed are brother-in-law/guitarist Clarence Pierce, Freddie King/Jimmy Reed bassist Johnny Woods, and Dallas harmonica ace Hash Brown. A couple of acoustic numbers, "Bad Sad" and standard "Key to the Highway," find Reed tipping his fedora to Lightnin' Hopkins. This is blues in the bucket, forthright and honest.
Where the Trinity Runs Free
Year: 2008
Time: 51:25
Size: 118,1 MB
Label: Dialtone Records
Styles: Blues
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Lady Pearl's Cut You Loose - 2:57
2. Never Make Your Move Too Soon - 3:44
3. Woke Up This Morning - 3:49
4. Look'n for the Blues - 3:47
5. Lucy Mae Blues - 3:17
6. I Love You Baby - 3:39
7. Two Trains Running - 4:36
8. Have You Ever Loved a Woman - 4:38
9. Bad Sad - 3:12
10. Boogie Chillen - 3:06
11. Wonder Why - 3:07
12. Trust Me - 3:33
13. Maypearl Rose - 4:13
14. Key to the Highway - 3:40
With a sound that's raw and raucous, Fort Worth bluesman Ray Reed cuts to the chase, eschewing any notions of pretension. With a half-century of paid dues under his belt, the singer/guitarist lays down the type of hardscrabble blues you'd find in a Saturday night roadhouse out on the Jacksborough Highway. It's the kind of unadulterated sound we've come to expect from Austin's Dialtone Records. Reed's handful of funky originals, including "Look'n for the Blues" and "Trust Me," stands up well next to choice covers of B.B. King, Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, and Frankie Lee Sims. Joining Reed are brother-in-law/guitarist Clarence Pierce, Freddie King/Jimmy Reed bassist Johnny Woods, and Dallas harmonica ace Hash Brown. A couple of acoustic numbers, "Bad Sad" and standard "Key to the Highway," find Reed tipping his fedora to Lightnin' Hopkins. This is blues in the bucket, forthright and honest.
Where the Trinity Runs Free
Greetings from Argentina, would it be possible to upload a new link? Thanks in advance!!!
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