Out In California (Live)
Download links and information about Out In California (Live) by Dave Alvin, The Guilty Men. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll, Country genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:15:53 minutes.
Artist: | Dave Alvin, The Guilty Men |
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Release date: | 2002 |
Genre: | Rock, Rock & Roll, Country |
Tracks: | 13 |
Duration: | 01:15:53 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Out In California (Live) | 6:49 |
2. | Haley's Comet (Live) | 4:48 |
3. | Little Honey / Who Do You Love (Live) | 9:21 |
4. | Abilene (Live) | 6:51 |
5. | Don't Let Your Deal Go Down (Live) | 7:32 |
6. | Highway 99 (Live) | 4:14 |
7. | Andersonville (Live) | 5:30 |
8. | All 'Round Man (Live) | 3:59 |
9. | Blue Boulevard (Live) | 6:15 |
10. | Wanda and Duane (Live) | 4:14 |
11. | Fourth of July (Live) | 5:33 |
12. | American Music (Live) | 7:01 |
13. | Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Live) | 3:46 |
Details
[Edit]Recorded live in August of 2001 in Santa Barbara and in January of 2002 in Pasadena, Dave Alvin's album comes by its title honestly. As live albums tend to be, it's a curious mix of the familiar and the obscure; concerts always have to offer the hits and standbys, but they also offer the performers a chance to play old and unfamiliar songs that hold a personal significance. Thus, listeners get rawboned performances of the inevitable "Fourth of July" (an Alvin composition recorded more famously by X, of which he was a member for a while) and "American Music" (recorded more famously by the Blasters, the band with which he made his breakthrough albums in the 1980s), along with a lascivious old Bo Carter blues, the Bo Diddley classic "Who Do You Love" (here performed in a medley with another old Blasters tune, "Little Honey") and the hoariest of old blues-rock chestnuts, "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down." The album's finest moment is a stunningly beautiful rendition of Alvin's "Abilene," which is beautiful in large part because the other bandmembers pitch in on vocals — Alvin is a fine guitarist and an even better songwriter, but he's no kind of singer. At the very end, there is a hidden track; an audience member calls for "Freebird" in an ironic tone of voice, and Alvin responds, "What, you think we can't play that?" With that, the band rips into "Freebird" with a (mercifully brief) vengeance. It's the perfect ending to a very impressive album.