Jim Lauderdale/Ralph Stanley/The Clinch Mountain B - Lost in the Lonesome Pines
Product Information
Track List: Lost in the Lonesome Pines
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- Deep Well Of Sadness - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- The Apples Are Just Turning Ripe - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Lost In The Lonesome Pines - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Zacchaeus - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Quit That - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- I Think Somebody Better Come Back Home - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Redbird - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Forever Ain't No Trouble Now - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- She Would Not Tell Her More - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- I Should Have Listened To Good Advice - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Oh Soul - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- She's Looking At Me - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Boat Of Love - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
- Listen To The Shepherd - Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain BoysDownload & Buy
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Album Details: Lost in the Lonesome Pines
- Release Date:
- 05/07/2002
- Label:
- Dualtone Music Group
- UPC:
- 803020112520
User Reviews: Lost in the Lonesome Pines
-
One of the BEST bluegrass albums of 2002!
, August 10, 2003Reviewer:
Joe Ross - See all Joe Ross's reviews
read all (1) user reviews for Lost in the Lonesome Pines
Pro Reviews: Lost in the Lonesome Pines
| EXPERT RATING: From AMG Reviews Songwriter and vocalist Jim Lauderdale's second pairing with bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley retains much of the vitality of 1999's I Feel Like Singing Today, and if anything, the duo seems to have become more comfortable working together on Lost in the Lonesome Pines. One can only imagine the jitters Lauderdale must have felt working in the studio with one of American music's true treasures, so the hints of apprehension revealed in the cracks of the earlier album have been brushed away, and the two sound like old pals sitting on a sunlit porch trading songs and licks. The gruff sentimentality in Lauderdale's lead vocals provide the perfect canvas for Ralph Stanley's high lonesome tenor to color, echoing the close harmonies of the Stanley Brothers from 50 years earlier. In many ways, this album is reminiscent of the spectacular collaboration between Steve Earle and Del McCoury on The Mountain; both albums paired a respected maverick singer/songwriter with a legendary bluegrass figure, and the results on both are not quite bluegrass and not quite contemporary folk, but both feel just about right. - Zac Johnson, All Music Guide |
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Jim Lauderdale/Ralph Stanley/The Clinch Mountain B Biography
Singer/songwriter Jim Lauderdale helped lay out the blueprint for the Americana movement of the '90s, earning high critical marks for an eclectic series of albums that spanned hard country, slick pop, rootsy rock roll, blues, folk, RB, and bluegrass...Full Jim Lauderdale/Ralph Stanley/The Clinch Mountain B Biography
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Of the 14 tracks on this latest album, 13 were written or co-written by Lauderdale. Every single piece is a winner that clearly shows that fresh, new bluegrass can be composed today that reflects the power, sentiments and emotions of traditional music. Songs like "Redbird" could have just as easily been written 100 years ago. For six songs, Lauderdale's songwriting collaborators include Candace Randolph, Shawn Camp, and Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter. Some of the songs like Randolph's and Lauderdale's "Quit That" and "I Think Somebody Better Come Back Home" have a Jimmy Martin-like feel that could help make these songs bluegrass standards. Lauderdale's songs and lonesome singing are filled with the typical themes of mountain music: love gone wrong, sorrow, nostalgia for home, and redemption. The band even presents a playful novelty number called "She's Looking At Me." The album's sound quality is excellent with in-your-face singing and picking. From the first notes on, Jim's lead vocals, Ralph's tenor, and the banjo-picking exclaim, "This is hard-driving bluegrass!" This is another landmark album for Lauderdale and Stanley, and if you like fresh bluegrass in a traditional vein, this album will hit the right spot. Lauderdale has found his place, and that is helping new traditional country music and bluegrass to endure. I'm giving a "double five" to Jim and Ralph and the Boys for this latest effort. (Joe Ross, staff writer, Bluegrass Now) ...