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High Lonesome and Blue

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Download links and information about High Lonesome and Blue by Del McCoury. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Blues, Gospel, Country, Outlaw Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 47:49 minutes.

Artist: Del McCoury
Release date: 2004
Genre: Blues, Gospel, Country, Outlaw Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 16
Duration: 47:49
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Road to Love 2:50
2. Lonesome Wind 2:41
3. I Feel the Blues Moving In 3:39
4. You'll Find Her Name Written There 3:39
5. High On a Mountain 2:52
6. I'll Pretend It's Raining 2:22
7. Don't Our Love Look Natural? 2:58
8. Cheek to Cheek With the Blues 2:20
9. Old Memories Mean Nothing to Me 3:34
10. If You've Got the Money Honey 2:03
11. Queen Anne's Lace 2:59
12. If You Need a Fool 2:43
13. The Bluest Man in Town 3:16
14. The Cold Hard Facts 2:46
15. Blackjack County Chains 3:25
16. Don't Stop the Music 3:42

Details

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High Lonesome and Blue is part of Rounder's 30th-anniversary 30-volume Heritage series of best-ofs compiled by label boss Ken Irwin. As such, it covers the living bluegrass legend Del McCoury's tenure with the label from 1987's The McCoury Brothers debut through to 1996's Cold Hard Facts. There are 16 cuts here, originals by McCoury's sons and bandmates as well as country classics (an amazing read of George Jones' "Don't Stop the Music" closes the album), bluegrass staples (Bill Monroe's "The Bluest Man in Town"), and tunes by contemporary writers such as Steve Earle ("If You Need a Fool") and David Olney ("Queen Anne's Lace"). This is a solid overview of a band that changed the face of bluegrass by using traditional means to approach the entire country music canon, fueled by the truly gifted musicianship of McCoury's sons, Ronnie and Rob, and Del's own singular voice. Musically, this is solid from top to bottom, and Del's own comments on the songs are a great bonus. Jon Weisberger's liner notes offer a decent thumbnail sketch of McCoury's biography, but his fawning comments about Rounder's vision and promotional strategies are irksome; they read like they were written by its marketing department. After all, isn't the label already paying tribute to itself with this series? Still, it's a fine compilation and a great introduction to the early genius of McCoury.