Create account Log in

Lone Starry Night

[Edit]

Download links and information about Lone Starry Night by John Arthur Martinez. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Country genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 46:53 minutes.

Artist: John Arthur Martinez
Release date: 2004
Genre: Country
Tracks: 13
Duration: 46:53
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. The Man Who Holds the Bow 4:13
2. Home Made of Stone 3:40
3. Amarillo By Morning 3:42
4. A Girl Named Texas 2:56
5. The Armadillo Song 2:58
6. If I Didn't Care 3:59
7. The River of Love / El Rio Amor 3:39
8. Tonight at Fiesta 4:00
9. Just Like the Moon 3:36
10. Trouble Rides a Fast Horse 3:19
11. Pour a Little Love on It 5:30
12. Lone Starry Night 3:34
13. Tonight at Fiesta (Reprise) 1:47

Details

[Edit]

John Arthur Martinez once sang George Strait songs in Texas bars, and Lone Starry Night follows the same neo-traditionalist country road. That means Martinez knows his country roots well, and draws from everything from honky tonk to Western swing to straightforward ballads, and that he leans closer to contemporary than alternative country. Both "The Man Who Holds the Bow" and "Home Made of Stone" rely on the time-honored practice of finding a slightly catchy metaphor to carry the weight of the song ("It ain't so much the fiddle, it's the man who holds the bow"). The problem with this approach is that many such phrases can sound like clichés before the ink dries. Martinez is more successful with "Amarillo By Morning," a gentle ballad relating hard-earned experience, and "A Girl Named Texas," a catchy bit of Texas jazz (Western swing). It's also nice that whether one listens to the quirky "The Armadillo Song" or the happy-go-lucky "Tonight at Fiesta," the guitars, steels, and fingerpicked acoustic guitar always come through loud and clear. Martinez is a soulful singer, and seems equally comfortable singing a love song like "Pour a Little Love On It" or the brooding "Trouble Rides a Fast Horse." Lone Starry Night should please contemporary listeners looking for a bit more bite to their country. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford Jr., Rovi