Meridian Rising
Download links and information about Meridian Rising by Paul Burch. This album was released in 2016 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 56:53 minutes.
Artist: | Paul Burch |
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Release date: | 2016 |
Genre: | Rock |
Tracks: | 20 |
Duration: | 56:53 |
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Buy on iTunes $9.99 | |
Buy on Songswave €1.60 | |
Buy on iTunes $9.99 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Meridian | 4:07 |
2. | Cadillacin' | 4:02 |
3. | US Rte 49 | 3:08 |
4. | Baby Blue Yodel | 1:31 |
5. | Black Lady Blues | 3:31 |
6. | Ain't That Water Lucky | 3:59 |
7. | June | 1:06 |
8. | To Paris (With Regrets) | 5:00 |
9. | Gunter Hotel Blues | 4:37 |
10. | Under Canvas | 0:18 |
11. | The Girl I Sawed in Half | 3:41 |
12. | Song of Silas Green | 0:23 |
13. | Poor Don't Vote | 3:25 |
14. | If I Could Only Catch My (feat. Billy Bragg & Jon Langford) | 3:36 |
15. | Sign of Distress | 0:56 |
16. | Fast Fuse Blues | 3:48 |
17. | Sorry I Can't Stay | 3:32 |
18. | Meridian Rising | 0:53 |
19. | Back to the Honky Tonks | 4:19 |
20. | Oh Didn't He Ramble | 1:01 |
Details
[Edit]Jimmie Rodgers has been the subject of tribute albums before — perhaps the most memorable is Merle Haggard's 1969 classic Same Train, a Different Time — but Paul Burch's Meridian Rising is distinctly different: the singer/songwriter designed his 2016 album as "an imagined musical autobiography" of the country legend. By neither following the conventions of a traditional tribute album nor the contours of a biography, Burch is freed to be fanciful, dreaming up scenarios for Rodgers that may not strictly adhere to written history and allowing himself to tip a hat to Rodgers' jazz and blues contemporaries. Such elasticity lends Meridian Rising considerable life, letting Burch slide into hot dance music as easily as he cops to a blue yodel. He's playful but not at the expense of his subject: if anything, his blurring of fact, fiction, and styles allows Rodgers to not be seen as a museum piece, a figure that exists only in dusty history books. Burch's wry, witty compositions — which find their match in his swinging band, its lineup shifting to accentuate the tones of the tunes — bring the Singing Brakeman to a colorful, full-bodied life while also illustrating how he's peerless as an Americana craftsman: he's absorbed tradition so thoroughly, he knows it's a shame to exist solely in the past, so he makes albums as rich and delightful as this.