| | American Heartbreak CD American Heartbreak Discography of CDs
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Much like they have for the entire history of what is commonly considered glam rock, the New York Dolls exercise a massive influence over San Francisco's American Heartbreak -- a band whose authentic interpretations of the style border on almost museum-like studiousness. That's not to say that the band lacks spontaneity (well, just a little bit) or originality (well, quite a bit, but then that's the point). It's just that their purist hearts are locked in such strict rhythmic step with their retro-minded mission that there's very little room for surprises -- unless one can recognize surprises in the spirited revisions of time-proven winning formulas, in which case this album's generous helping of 13 songs is as reliably entertaining as it is inherently familiar. Opening trio "Somebody," "Sick n' Tired," and "Love Your Abuse" set the tone with their gritty, minimal AC/DC riffs that inevitably give way to the Dolls' bubblegum hooks and a series of cooed (rarely screamed) gang harmonies the likes of which Cheap Trick worked like a science. And that's all before you even get to "Things Are Looking Up," which adds a layer of acoustic guitars and arguably tops them all with the album's most immediate and unforgettable chorus. Ensuing numbers like "Raise Up Your Hands," "Isolation," and "Last of the Superheroes (Of the 1970s)" are similarly well appointed, though never quite as great, leaving the listener wanting for a better punchline, or at least a bigger punch in the gut, but "The Girl Who Knows Nothing at All" -- a grimy power ballad in the L.A. Guns or Faster Pussycat mold -- makes up the difference as it echoes through the back alleys of the '80s Sunset Strip. And, with late album heroics like "Crawling" (with its darker, Wildhearts tinge) and "Fallen Angels" (with its made-to-order poetics) cementing the band's creative prolificacy, American Heartbreak have a lot to be proud of in their reviving of classic rock & roll here. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Recording information: The Sandbox, Hollywood, CA (02/2004-07/2004).
Photographer: Robert John.
American Heartbreak: Lance Boone (vocals); Billy Rowe (guitar, bass guitar, background vocals); Casey Crenshaw (guitar, background vocals); Michael Butler (bass guitar, background vocals); Paul Scavuzzo (drums).
Personnel: Brian Forsythe (guitar); Johnny Cruz (drums).
American Heartbreak Music American Heartbreak Songs American Heartbreak Music American Heartbreak Music Review Purchase American Heartbreak CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Paul Butterfield Blues Band CD (1965)
American Heartbreak album
$6.19 The '60s Blues Revival begins here. Calling this album influential is an understatement akin to calling the Grand Canyon a rut; suffice to say that an entire generation of musicians (mostly young and white) heard this and had their lives changed forever. In fact, for at least a year after the album's release in 1965, it was impossible ...
| | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
American Heartbreak CD music
$6.19 This audio document of The Corrs' Dublin homecoming concert has pretty much everything fans of Irish pop could wish for, including an appearance from Bono in his earthly incarnation, fresh from an audience with President George W. Bush. It's to the band's credit that the charismatic singer fails to steal the show, despite creditable efforts via an anthemized version of Ryan Adams' beautifully downtempo "When the Stars Go Blue," and a great, leering rendition of Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra's "Summer Wine."
Somewhat more mysteriously, ...
| | Drive-By Truckers Southern Rock Opera CDs (2001) Digipak
American Heartbreak music CDs
$11.99 A sprawling two-disc set, the Drive-By Truckers' SOUTHERN ROCK OPERA is a cracked masterpiece that's enjoyable on several different levels. Hipsters might enjoy the giggly premise of a two-disc set devoted to a slightly altered retelling of the rise and fall of 1970s Southern rock icons Lynyrd Skynyrd. Progressive rock fans lamenting the modern era's relative lack of story-driven albums divided into "Act I" and "Act II" will latch ...
| | Chris Robinson This Magnificent Distance CD (2004)
American Heartbreak songs
$15.65 Although former Black Crowes frontman Chris Robinson strayed away from the harder-edged nuances of his previous gig with his debut solo album, NEW EARTH MUD, his sophomore outing, THIS MAGNIFICENT DISTANCE, finds him plugging in and rocking out. Paul Stacey returns from the first record and is joined by Robinson's guitar-wielding former Crowes bandmate Audley Freed. Robinson fans yearning for the more upbeat side of the Georgia native's musical side won't be disappointed. From ...
| | Dredg Catch Without Arms CD (2005)
American Heartbreak album
$8.49 Early on, critics often described Dredg as a metal group. However, the quartet has since ...
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American Heartbreak music CDs
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| | Goddamn Gentleman Sex-Caliber Horsepower CD (2001)
American Heartbreak songs
$6.59 The Goddamn Gentlemen's debut album of jacked-up garage punk matches the in-the-red vocals of the Sonics with the high-powered proto-punk of MC5, the Stooges, and Rocket From the Tombs, adding slashing guitars and Farfisa-driven spookiness. The B-movie horror vibe is all over the creepy "Murder Man," complete with the fair warning, "I know you don't even care/But girl you better have on your clean underwear." There's a dumbfounding, innovative quality present on a few of the tracks here, as the brief and bizarre tempo shifting in songs ...
| | Blood Red Hostage CD (2002)
American Heartbreak album
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| | I Have Always Been Here Before: The Roky Erickson Anthology CDs (2005) Digipak
American Heartbreak music CDs
$20.75 Given the influence Roky Erickson has had throughout a career dating back to his work with the psychedelic garage rockers The 13th Floor Elevators, it is amazing that it took until 2005 for an anthology as comprehensive as I HAVE ALWAYS BEEN HERE BEFORE to appear. Kicking off with "We Sell Soul," a 1965 lo-fi nugget Erickson cut with his pre-Elevators band The Spades, this wild ride spans over three decades. In addition to the seminal Elevators classic "You're Gonna Miss Me" (with its gravelly vocals and rubbery twang), there's his mid-'70s solo comeback featuring the Doug Sahm-produced, wah-wah-drenched dirge "Red Temple Prayer (Two Headed Dog)" and its hook-filled sibling "Starry Eyes." Marred by frequent bouts with mental illness throughout his career, it is frightening to hear the enormous talent that Erickson displayed during moments of clarity. His raw, mercurial skills shine throughout, whether on the late '70s sessions with the Aliens (including the faux skinny-tie twang of "I Think Up Demons" and "Don't Shake Me Lucifer") or the forlorn, autobiographical chamber pop of "Please Judge" from 1995's ALL THAT MAY DO MY RHYME.
Roky Erickson: John Shropshire, Bennie Thurman, Ronnie Leatherman (bass guitar); John Kearney (drums); Stacy Sutherland, Tommy Hall, Danny Thomas , Clementine Hall.
Personnel: Roky Erickson (vocals, guitar, 12-string guitar, harmonica, tambourine); Roky Erickson; Tommy Hall (vocals, guitar); Clementine Hall (vocals, background vocals); Bill T. Miller (vocals); John Shropshire (guitar, background vocals); Mike Hinton, Jack Johnson, Stacy Sutherland, John X Reed, Mike Hinton ...
| | Project X Straight Edge Revenge CD (2005)
American Heartbreak songs
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| | Robots In Disguise Get Rid CD (2005)
American Heartbreak album
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