With Ken Coomer behind the production board and keyboardist Abe Wilson behind the mic, Sons of Bill roll their disparate influences – R.E.M., Queen, Big Star, Pink Floyd, The Beatles – into this standout track from Love And Logic. “When I Come Around” is a waltzing ode to the small pockets of the Bible Belt, shot through with fiddles, pedal steel guitar, close harmonies and a passionate performance from Womack, who croons with confidence after her half-decade sabbatical. Newly signed to Sugar Hill Records, Lee Ann Womack kicks country-pop to the gutter and embraces a raw, rootsy, realistic sound on The Way I’m Livin’, her first album in six years. “Happy days are still ahead,” he sings toward song’s end, before yielding the spotlight to a swirling organ solo that steers the tune throughout its final 60 seconds. That’s no reason to hang up the guitar, though. He’s a working musician with bills to pay and two children to feed. Taylor taking a good, hard look at life as he slides into middle age. Hey, Quentin Tarantino: we’ve found a song for your next movie soundtrack.Ī breezy folk-rocker that could’ve been lifted from Tom Petty’s Wildflowers, “Mahogany Dread” finds frontman M.C. “Did We Live Too Fast” finds Winstead crooning about sour love over a backdrop of swooning strings and lounge-ish piano trills. As bandmates, though, the two swirl up a sexy, slinky sound more reminiscent of French spy movies. Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Dan the Automator first met on the set of Scott Pilgrim Vs. It doesn’t necessarily take a village to perform a love song … but sometimes, it does sound better that way. With Jason Isbell singing background harmonies and a pair of modern-day guitar gods – Audley Freed and Sadler Vaden – slashing their way through boogie-woogie riffs worthy of The Faces, “You Make Me” finds Cory Branan pledging his boozy, bluesy love to his wife.
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