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Sleeping on Roads

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Download links and information about Sleeping on Roads by Neil Halstead. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Country, Alternative Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 48:19 minutes.

Artist: Neil Halstead
Release date: 2001
Genre: Country, Alternative Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 9
Duration: 48:19
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Seasons 5:23
2. Two Stones in My Pocket 4:27
3. Driving With Bert 6:17
4. Hi-Lo and in Between 4:47
5. See You on Rooftops 6:34
6. Martha's Mantra (For the Pain) 5:11
7. Sleeping on Roads 4:17
8. Dreamed I Saw Soldiers 6:20
9. High Hopes 5:03

Details

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In which Neil Halstead is finally able to show everyone that he is the real talent of Mojave 3! Hurrah! OK, maybe not: Anyone who has looked at songwriting credits on a Mojave 3 record will tell you that the idea of a Halstead solo record sounds completely pointless. Even a casual fan is led to believe that Halstead's band is his band — meaning he writes the songs and calls the shots. With a Halstead solo record a reality, you have to fight the urge to throw your arms up in puzzlement because the wrong member of Mojave 3 has made a solo record. History says that the second fiddle goes off to release a work of his own; the one who writes most of the material — or, in this case, almost everything — doesn't need another outlet. But apparently listeners have been duped and Mojave 3 is more of a democracy than had been imagined. More importantly, Halstead is too prolific and restless to leave these previously orphaned songs unrecorded. So, after a relationship bust-up that left him homeless, he set up shop in a hospitable studio and made a record with some friends pitching in. One of those friends was Mojave 3 drummer Ian McCutcheon, so it could be said that this record is a la-la-la and a few basslines away from a Mojave 3 record. It certainly doesn't sound that much different from a Mojave 3 record, if not quite as excellent due to the less than prime quality of some of the songs. Aside from a prominent synth shading here, an uncharacteristically loud burst of guitar there, and Halstead's preference to pick instead of strum, this is a logical, if rather slight, progression from the third Mojave 3 record. And that's just fine, actually.