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A New Day Yesterday

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Download links and information about A New Day Yesterday by Joe Bonamassa. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 57:57 minutes.

Artist: Joe Bonamassa
Release date: 2000
Genre: Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 12
Duration: 57:57
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Cradle Rock 3:50
2. Walk In My Shadows 3:26
3. A New Day Yesterday 4:44
4. I Know Where I Belong 5:38
5. Miss You, Hate You 6:03
6. Nuthin' I Wouldn't Do (For a Woman Like You) 5:09
7. Colour and Shape 5:01
8. Headaches to Heartbreaks 4:56
9. Trouble Waiting 3:25
10. If Heartaches Were Nickels 7:49
11. Current Situation 3:35
12. Don't Burn Down That Bridge 4:21

Details

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Named after the early Jethro Tull classic, which he expertly covers here in a jaw-dropping performance, A New Day Yesterday is a fine debut by guitar ace Joe Bonamassa. And though his record company tried to ride the coattails of teenage guitar prodigies like Kenny Wayne Shepard and Jonny Lang and position him (misguidedly and much too late) as a straight-up prodigal blues kid, Bonamassa is really much more than a traditional bluesman. Rather, as best exemplified by the Jethro Tull number cited above, his bluesy take on Free's "Walk in My Shadows," or his hard boogie romp through Al Kooper's "Nuthin' I Wouldn't Do (For a Woman Like You)," this excellent debut places the guitarist's influences as much in classic '70s hard rock as in the blues. Along with his deceptively age-wearied vocals (he was only 22 at the time of this recording), this unusual combination translates into the aggressive, soulful crunch heard on Bonamassa's many original compositions. Among these, the jolting double whammy of "Miss You, Hate You" and "Colour and the Shape" (note the Anglicized spelling) are the most obvious standouts, but the guitarist also makes the Warren Haynes-penned "If Heartaches Were Nickels" his own with a tense, riveting performance. All in all, a promising debut.