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Chip Taylor - Black and Blue America (CD)

Black and Blue America
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5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Black and Blue America

Release Date:08/07/2001
Label:Trainwreck Records
UPC:670501001129

Track List: Black and Blue America

  1. Black & Blue Intro
  2. Black & Blue America
  3. Dance With Jesus Intro
  4. Dance With Jesus
  5. Could I Live With This Intro
  6. Could I Live With This
  7. It Don't Get Better Than This (T...
  8. It Don't Get Better Than This (T...
  9. Theme For An American Hero Intro
  10. Theme For An American Hero
  11. Sometimes I Act Just Like A Fool...
  12. Sometimes I Act Just Like A Fool
  13. I Need Some Horses Around Intro
  14. I Need Some Horses Around
  15. Fort Worth Thursday Night Intro
  16. Fort Worth Thursday Night
  1. The Ship Intro
  2. The Ship
  3. In Your Weakness Intro
  4. In Your Weakness
  5. Blind Of The Midnight Hour Intro
  6. Blind Of The Midnight Hour
  7. You Left Me Here Intro
  8. You Left Me Here
  9. What A Smile You Had Intro
  10. What A Smile You Had
  11. Stroke City Girls Intro
  12. Stroke City Girls
  13. The Way Of It Intro
  14. The Way Of It
  15. Temptation Intro
  16. Temptation

User Reviews: Black and Blue America

  • Overall:

    Terry Allen - Lubbock (on Everything)

    By drh1est  Nov 21, 2001

    One of the best "alternative" CD's of all time.
    It expands the boundaries of what alternative actually means.

Pro Reviews: Black and Blue America

  • All Music Guide

    Chip Taylor has turned into the philosopher of country music, not to mention its social historian. With each track introduced by a soundbite that seems to act as a springboard for his lyrical musings, Taylor tracks the way America lost its innocence ("Black and Blue America"), relationships ("In Your Weakness"), the carefree young life ("For Worth Thursday Night," which gets extra points for a gratuitous mention of Robert Earl Keen), and alcohol and faith ("Dance With Jesus"). So, by its nature, this isn't an album for casual listening, although on one level listeners can let it float along, with a sound that ranges from alt-country to gospel. It's largely stripped-down, but that suits him. When the band swells behind him, Taylor's voice takes on neo-operatic tones that simply don't work. What's really passion sounds merely like too much effort. But the songs definitely do work, and duets with Lucinda Williams, John Prine, and former soul diva P.P. Arnold sparkle, even when they're as ...bleak as Williams' contribution to "The Ship." Over the years Taylor's work has turned introspective, but this might be his deepest yet, a plumbing of what life, America, and its people has become. His future releases will probably have the same warm humor, compassion, and hope for the future as Black and Blue America. - Chris Nickson, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Chip Taylor

Chip Taylor probably will always be known as the songwriter who wrote "Wild Thing" and "Angel of the Morning." Born John Wesley Voight (the actor Jon Voight is his older brother), Taylor began playing country music while still in high school in Yonkers, NY. After finishing high school, he briefly took up his father's occupation, becoming a professional golfer. But he su... Read more