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Looking for a Fight

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Download links and information about Looking for a Fight by The Sweetback Sisters. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Rock, Country, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 39:54 minutes.

Artist: The Sweetback Sisters
Release date: 2011
Genre: Rock, Country, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 13
Duration: 39:54
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Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Love Me, Honey, Do 2:31
2. Texas Bluebonnets 2:33
3. It Won't Hurt When I Fall Down from This Barstool 3:45
4. Looking for a Fight 2:54
5. Run Home and Cry 2:41
6. The Mystery of You 2:50
7. Don't Put Her Down, You Helped Put Her There 4:00
8. Thank You 3:02
9. The Heart of My Mind 3:58
10. Rattled 3:00
11. Home 4:12
12. Too Many Experts 3:10
13. Cowboy Ham and Eggs 1:18

Details

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The Sweetback Sisters, a sextet of unrelated musicians only two of whom — co-lead singers Zara Bode and Emily Miller — are female, deliver their second album in Looking for a Fight, once again revealing themselves as a talented retro-country tribute band. Based in Brooklyn, the group embraces many styles of traditional country music, some of them in forms already revived once before in these songs. In addition to Western swing (the Sons of the Pioneers' "Cowboy Ham and Eggs") and countrypolitan (the Patsy Cline evergreen "Love Me, Honey, Do"), for example, they cover neo-Tex-Mex (Laurie Lewis' "Texas Bluebonnets"), neo-Bakersfield sound (Dwight Yoakam's "It Won't Hurt When I Fall Down from This Bar Stool"), and neo-rockabilly (the Traveling Wilburys' "Rattled"). They also write their own country songs, with a downhearted cry-in-your-beer honky tonk flavor as well as more amusing observations from the barroom, notably guitarist Jesse Milnes' "Too Many Experts" (which is one of the things one can encounter in a bar). Bode and Miller are equally effective frontwomen, with Bode taking some of the more assertive numbers, such as Milnes' title song, and Miller the sweeter ones, and they harmonize well together. The Sweetback Sisters achieve the difficult task of approaching their frankly old-fashioned music with an enthusiasm that is not devoid of humor, yet never descends into parody.