Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Hell Bound Train

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2010年04月03日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルRed Parlor
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 デジパック
規格品番 RPRL10152
SKU 884501257787

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:39:45
Personnel: Tom Gray (vocals, lap steel guitar, keyboards); Mark Johnson (guitar); Darren Stanley (drums, percussion); Franher Joseph (background vocals). Audio Mixer: Jeff Bakos. Atlanta's swamp-blues kings add another notch to their belt of tough, Southern, slide guitar-dominated blues/roots rock with this, the band's fifth studio release. Although little has changed musically since slimming to a quartet, frontmen/guitarists Tom Gray and Mark Johnson's songs have continued to refine their sense of groove, and Gray is increasingly comfortable with his lead vocal status. The group's confident dynamics and the combination of Gray's homey sandpaper voice with the intertwining guitar leads, perhaps best exemplified by "Stuck in Carolina"'s low-boil funk, keeps getting more incisive. Although there are plenty of solos, they are in service to the tunes, not vice-versa, surely an anomaly for acts that boast the sheer firepower of these two guitarists. When Gray nails a grimy, rust-colored riff as he does on the opening title track or the obsessive "Lonely," it seems like something ZZ Top would kill for in that band's earlier days. Add the dueling/overlapping guitar lines and the result is a gritty, distinctive attack that is driving when necessary, yet subtle enough to keep the spotlight on Gray's detailed, occasional story-song lyrics that often find him or his protagonists down but not quite out somewhere in the South. Country overtones inform "Take the Back Road Home," altering the approach somewhat, similar to the haunting unplugged, acoustic ballad "Plantation Song" that closes the disc. It's a sporadically spooky, even ghostly vibe, a point Gray articulates on "Ghost in My Guitar" with a distinct Dr. John feel enhanced by bubbling congas. Johnson's six-string banjo and the occasional guest saxophone also shows that though Delta Moon isn't straying from its core sound, there are plenty of ways to tweak the basics without changing the result. Even after five albums over the past eight years, it seems that the group is just starting to explore the possibilities inherent in their blues-based Southern genre. It's a style that could be confining, but in their hands, never is. ~ Hal Horowitz

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Hellbound Train
    2. 2.
      Room 429
    3. 3.
      Lonely
    4. 4.
      Get Gone
    5. 5.
      True Love Lies
    6. 6.
      You Got to Move
    7. 7.
      Stuck in Carolina
    8. 8.
      Ain't No Train
    9. 9.
      Ghost in My Guitar
    10. 10.
      Take the Back Road Home
    11. 11.
      Plantation Song

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Delta Moon

その他
エンジニア: Ben Holst; Jeff Bakos
プロデューサー: Delta Moon

オリジナル発売日:2010年

商品の紹介

Uncut (p.84) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Sounding like Creedence Clearwater Revival, smeared with slide guitar, Delta Moon are a throwback to the bar-band glories of yore." Down Beat (p.58) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Delta Moon show an unaffected, honest appreciation of the blues canon when hitting all the right notes of the Fred McDowell masterwork 'You Got To Move.'"
Rovi

Atlantas swamp-blues kings add another notch to their belt of tough, Southern, slide guitar-dominated blues/roots rock with this, the bands fifth studio release. Although little has changed musically since slimming to a quartet, frontmen/guitarists Tom Gray and Mark Johnsons songs have continued to refine their sense of groove, and Gray is increasingly comfortable with his lead vocal status. The groups confident dynamics and the combination of Grays homey sandpaper voice with the intertwining guitar leads, perhaps best exemplified by "Stuck in Carolina"s low-boil funk, keeps getting more incisive. Although there are plenty of solos, they are in service to the tunes, not vice-versa, surely an anomaly for acts that boast the sheer firepower of these two guitarists. When Gray nails a grimy, rust-colored riff as he does on the opening title track or the obsessive "Lonely," it seems like something ZZ Top would kill for in that bands earlier days. Add the dueling/overlapping guitar lines and the result is a gritty, distinctive attack that is driving when necessary, yet subtle enough to keep the spotlight on Grays detailed, occasional story-song lyrics that often find him or his protagonists down but not quite out somewhere in the South. Country overtones inform "Take the Back Road Home," altering the approach somewhat, similar to the haunting unplugged, acoustic ballad "Plantation Song" that closes the disc. Its a sporadically spooky, even ghostly vibe, a point Gray articulates on "Ghost in My Guitar" with a distinct Dr. John feel enhanced by bubbling congas. Johnsons six-string banjo and the occasional guest saxophone also shows that though Delta Moon isnt straying from its core sound, there are plenty of ways to tweak the basics without changing the result. Even after five albums over the past eight years, it seems that the group is just starting to explore the possibilities inherent in their blues-based Southern genre. Its a style that could be confining, but in their hands, never is. ~ Hal Horowitz
Rovi

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