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There Ain't No Way Out

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Download links and information about There Ain't No Way Out by The New Lost City Ramblers. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 26 tracks with total duration of 01:12:25 minutes.

Artist: The New Lost City Ramblers
Release date: 1997
Genre: World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 26
Duration: 01:12:25
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Buck Creek Girls 2:59
2. Skip to My Lou 2:57
3. Jolie Petite Blonde 2:58
4. God's Gonna Ease My Troublin' Mind 4:28
5. Anchored In Love Divine 2:41
6. Last Chance 1:55
7. Weave Room Blues 2:36
8. Sugar Baby 2:41
9. Oh Death 3:51
10. Cumberland Gap 2:36
11. Do You Call That Religion 3:01
12. Crapshooter's Hop 3:00
13. Brown Skin Gal 2:20
14. Oh Death 2:45
15. Big Ball's In Town 3:11
16. Colored Aristocracy 2:21
17. Treat My Daughter Kindly 2:48
18. I'm On My Way to the Old Home 3:10
19. Farewell Sweet Jane 2:44
20. The Girl I Left Behind 3:00
21. Miner's Lament 2:46
22. Shady Grove 1:57
23. Free Little Bird 2:57
24. Rabbit In the Pea Patch 2:26
25. One-Step de Riche 2:25
26. Tom and Jerry 1:52

Details

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More than 20 years after the New Lost City Ramblers' last studio recordings, Mike Seeger, John Cohen, and Tracy Schwarz got back together for There Ain't No Way Out, a 26-track celebration of old-timey music, including bluegrass, yodel blues, spirituals, Cajun, and what is usually referred to generically as "folk" music. They haven't lost much of their edge, even if — by their own admission — there are younger, sharper players out there in the wake of the path they opened. Highlights include a sweetly sung "God's Gonna Ease My Troublin' Mind," A.P. Carter's "Anchored in Love Divine," the Dixon Brothers' "Weave Room Blues" (which has a Jimmie Rodgers sound to it), "Cumberland Gap," "Shady Grove," "Skip to My Lou," and "Crapshooters Hop." They still harmonize beautifully, their instruments sing even sweeter, and the advantages of modern recording aren't lost on this sharp body of music. The notes, featuring contributions by all three players, are exceptionally detailed and informative about their history, as well as that of the songs.