Create account Log in

Live At Billy Bob's Texas: Randy Rogers Band

[Edit]

Download links and information about Live At Billy Bob's Texas: Randy Rogers Band by Randy Rogers Band. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Country genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:11:29 minutes.

Artist: Randy Rogers Band
Release date: 2005
Genre: Country
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:11:29
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Somebody Take Me Home 3:41
2. Down and Out 4:20
3. Like It Used to Be 3:16
4. Company You Keep 3:54
5. Still Be Losing You 3:17
6. Can't Slow Down 4:31
7. Love Must Follow You Around 4:39
8. One Thing I Know 3:22
9. Again 3:27
10. I Never Meant to Break Your Heart 4:32
11. Ten Miles Deep 3:31
12. Tonight's Not the Night (For Goodbye) 4:23
13. They Call It the Hill Country 5:22
14. Lost and Found 9:26
15. This Time Around 5:10
16. An Empty Glass ( That's the Way the Day Ends) 4:38

Details

[Edit]

Released hot on the heels of Randy Rogers' second album (his first for the Smith label), Live at Billy Bob's Texas is a curiously subdued live set. Rogers is that rarity, a country singer/songwriter who records with his road band instead of the usual session musicians, which gives his albums a relaxed, rough-edged feel missing from the standard antiseptic Music Row product. But unfortunately, it also means that there's little difference between these live tracks and Rogers' studio albums. Only the occasional whoop or slightly ill-timed cymbal crash differentiates some of the songs. More effective are tracks like "Tonight's Not the Night," which Rogers and band take a bit faster and with more passion than on the laid-back studio cut, and "Again," a Rogers co-write originally recorded by his songwriting partner Cody Canada's band Cross Canadian Ragweed that Rogers turns into a fuzz-guitar-powered rocker. The set climaxes with an extended workout on "Lost and Found," from Rogers' debut, showcasing a series of solos brief enough to keep from devolving into tiresome showboating. Some more moments of spontaneity would make Live at Billy Bob's Texas a more exciting listen, but fans should appreciate it.