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Soledad Brothers - Hardest Walk (CD)

Hardest Walk
$12.37
4 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Hardest Walk

Release Date:03/14/2006
Label:Alive Records
UPC:095081006621

Other Available Formats: Hardest Walk

User Reviews: Hardest Walk

  • Overall:

    Potent Stones-influenced garage-blues

    By redtunictroll  Apr 25, 2006

    Pros: Fine British Invasion influenced blues garage rock.

    Cons: Nothing innovative, but that isn't necessarily a "con."

    Grown in the same Detroit firmament as The White Stripes, this three-piece offers a similar blend of garage rock and blues, but without the two-piece minimalism. Their fifth album, the first for the California-based Alive Records, gains its intensity... and blues heaviness more from the British Invasion (particularly the Stones, Yardbirds and Pretty Things) than directly from the Mississippi Delta or Chicago bars. The potent rhythm guitar interplay and the punk-tinged vocals are particularly remindful of mid-60s blues reinterpreters. The band's originals add touches of psychedelia and glamrock swagger, and on "Good Feeling" a taste of the Memphis soul that Big Star brought to the rock 'n' roll party. The band's fascination with the Stones hasn't subsided, but it's definitely evolved, as though their debt has been paid but not forgotten. [©2006 redtunictroll at hotmail dot com] Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Hardest Walk

  • All Music Guide

    The Soledad Brothers' fifth album, The Hardest Walk, opens with "Truth or Consequences," a solid and gloriously raunchy slice of bluesshot rock roll that recalls the Rolling Stones in their Sticky Fingers/Exile on Main St. glory days with its gutsy guitar lines and horn accents. But the Soledad Brothers don't seem to be channeling the sound of the Stones so much as their approach on The Hardest Walk. Like those abovementioned albums, The Hardest Walk isn't afraid to make with the rock, and with the band expanded to a quartet for these sessions with the addition of multiinstrumentalist Dechman, songs like "Crooked Crown" and "Good Feeling" are rich and full bodied without sounding cluttered or losing the spaces around the notes. But just as the Stones found as much hard groove and hard soul in their slow and quiet numbers as the rockers, the Soledad Brothers explore the sense of dynamics they discovered on 2003's Voice of Treason, and "Crying Out Loud (Tears of Joy)," "Let Me Down," "T...rue to Zou Zou," and the title song are latenight numbers that add a potent atmosphere to the disc that straightup guitar wail couldn't have brought them. The Soledad Brothers have obviously learned that their musical world does not begin and end with the messedup bluesrock of their early days, and The Hardest Walk sounds like their most satisfying offering to date. - Mark Deming, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Soledad Brothers

The dark blues duo Soledad Brothers began in early 1998 after guitarist/vocalist Johnny Wirick (a.k.a. Johnny Walker) asked drummer Ben Smith (a.k.a. Ben Swank) if he wanted to play a show. Since then, they have recorded for Detroit's Italy Records and Bellingham, Washington's Estrus label. Wirick and Smith's partnership can be traced back to their days in the Toledo, O... Read more