| | Jim Lauderdale Lost In The Lonesome Pines CD Jim Lauderdale Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
 |
|
Our Price: $11.65 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $10.89
|  |
Additional personnel includes: Ralph Stanley II (guitar, background vocals); James Alan Shelton (guitar); Steve Sparkman (banjo); John Rigsby (mandolin, background vocals); James Price (fiddle); George Shuffler, Jack Cooke (bass, background vocals).
LOST IN THE LONESOME PINES won the 2003 Grammy Award for Best Bluegrass Album.
This is the second collaboration between country cult hero Jim Lauderdale and bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley. Apparently, the first one worked so well that a follow-up seemed natural. While Lauderdale and Stanley (along with Stanley's band the Clinch Mountain Boys) stick closely to a traditional, bluegrass-oriented sound, all the songs except Bill Monroe's "Boat of Love" are new ones penned or co-penned by Lauderdale. This fact, plus the sheer energy and enthusiastic vibe generated by the performers, makes for a kind of freshness that's lacking on many contemporary bluegrass albums. LOST IN THE PINES shows that you don't have to resort to pop cover tunes to keep bluegrass current, just treat it like a living art instead of a museum piece. Additionally, Grateful Dead fans will be glad to note that, like it's predecessor, this album contains a couple of great tunes co-written by that band's famed lyricist Robert Hunter.
/Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys.
W/ The Clinch Mountain Boys
Recorded at Maggard Sound, Big Stone Gap, Virginia; Bay View Studios, Richmond, California.
Producers: Jim Lauderdale, The Clinch Mountain Boys.
Engineers: David Castle, Alan Maggard, Larry Cumings. Lost In The Lonesome Pines Music | List Price | $13.98 (You save $2.33) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Bluegrass CDs, Soundtrack Collections, Progressive, Country | | Label | Dualtone Music Group Inc. | | Orig Year | 2002 | | All Time Sales Rank | 30683  | | CD Universe Part number | 3113571 | | Catalog number | 1125 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | May 07, 2002 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Personnel | Jack Cooke, John Rigsby, Steve Sparkman, James Alan Shelton, James Price, George Shuffler, Ralph Stanley, II, Clinch Mountain Boys |
Jim Lauderdale Lost In The Lonesome Pines Songs Lost In The Lonesome Pines Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   Breathing music and harmony Love that album. Top of the line band. Submitted by beachlover1453 (62377 Salem Road Salesville,ohio 43778)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
One of the BEST bluegrass albums of 2002! Jim Lauderdale is a prolific songwriter in contemporary country music who has penned many hits for artists like Vince Gill, Patty Loveless, Mark Chesnutt, Kathy Mattea, and George Strait. He also has several recordings of his own and has appeared on the Grand Ol' Opry. A North Carolina native and son of a minister/choir director, Lauderdale also has extensive bluegrass roots. When he arrived in Nashville in the late 1970s, he had hoped to pursue a bluegrass career. Instead, he moved into mainstream country. However, Lauderdale has always considered Stanley as "the Mount Rushmore of music," and his love for bluegrass became apparent when he featured Ralph and the Clinch Mountain Boys on his 1997 album, "Whisper." Later, Lauderdale was a guest on Stanley's "Clinch Mountain Country" project, and he in now an honorary Clinch Mountain Boy. Building on the chemistry between these two artists, they collaborated on an album of their own, the Grammy-nominated and highly recommended "I Feel Like Singing Today," (on the Rebel label).
Of the 14 tracks on this latest album, 13 were written or co-written by Lauderdale. Every single piece is a winner that clearly shows that fresh, new bluegrass can be composed today that reflects the power, sentiments and emotions of traditional music. Songs like "Redbird" could have just as easily been written 100 years ago. For six songs, Lauderdale's songwriting collaborators include Candace Randolph, Shawn Camp, and Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter. Some of the songs like Randolph's and Lauderdale's "Quit That" and "I Think Somebody Better Come Back Home" have a Jimmy Martin-like feel that could help make these songs bluegrass standards. Lauderdale's songs and lonesome singing are filled with the typical themes of mountain music: love gone wrong, sorrow, nostalgia for home, and redemption. The band even presents a playful novelty number called "She's Looking At Me." The album's sound quality is excellent with in-your-face singing and picking. From the first notes on, Jim's lead vocals, Ralph's tenor, and the banjo-picking exclaim, "This is hard-driving bluegrass!" This is another landmark album for Lauderdale and Stanley, and if you like fresh bluegrass in a traditional vein, this album will hit the right spot. Lauderdale has found his place, and that is helping new traditional country music and bluegrass to endure. I'm giving a "double five" to Jim and Ralph and the Boys for this latest effort. (Joe Ross, staff writer, Bluegrass Now)
Submitted by a reviewer (Roseburg, OR, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
| Have you heard this album? |  |
Purchase Lost In The Lonesome Pines CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart
|