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Jay Farrar - Stone, Steel & Bright Lights

Stone, Steel & Bright Lights
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Album Details: Stone, Steel & Bright Lights

Release Date:06/08/2004
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Track List: Stone, Steel & Bright Lights

  1. Doesn't Have to Be This Way
  2. Greenwich Time
  3. 6 String Belief
  4. Feel Free
  5. Make It Alright
  6. No Rolling Back
  7. Damn Shame
  8. All of Your Might
  9. Cahokian
  10. Heart on the Ground
  1. California
  2. Fool King's Crown
  3. Vitamins
  4. Voodoo Candle
  5. Damaged Son
  6. Feed Kill Chain
  7. Clear Day Thunder
  8. Lucifer Sam
  9. Like a Hurricane

Pro Reviews: Stone, Steel & Bright Lights

  • All Music Guide

    Jay Farrar's career after the breakup of Uncle Tupelo has been dogged by two consistent creative gremlins a seeming inability to write songs with the same strength and emotional impact as his earlier work, and a frequent lack of worthy collaborators. However, anyone who has seen Farrar live since the release of Sebastopol can tell you the man has been in excellent form on stage, as confident and engaged as he's ever been (occasionally even smiling and talking to the audience, rare events during his Son Volt gigs), and 2004's Stone, Steel Bright Lights finds him sounding sharp, enthusiastic and fully committed on a wellchosen set of postSon Volt compositions recorded in concert. It also finds him working with a group of musicians who are at once sympathetic and forceful enough to add a personality of their own to the songs in the fall of 2003, Canyon served as Farrar's opening act and backing band, and while their sound dovetails flawlessly with Farrar's melodic sensibility, they sou...nd less like a group of accompanying musicians and more like a band, and the frisson between the players (Farrar included) gives these recordings a much needed spark. The cool fire Farrar and Canyon generate together in front of an audience also helps to camouflage the frontman's other problem while he's cherrypicked the best material from Sebastopol, ThirdShiftGrottoSlack and Terroir Blues for this set, the truth is none of these tunes connect quite like "Windfall", "Anodyne" or "Graveyard Shift", and while Farrar and Canyon give the songs their best efforts, this album doesn't fire on all cylinders until they roll into the two song encore, in which they cover Syd Barrett and Neil Young. Stone, Steel Bright Lights manages to capture Jay Farrar at his apex as a solo artist, while at the same time reminding fans of why his solo work continues to be so frustrating; thankfully, though, its strengths manage to outweigh its weaknesses by the time the 19 tracks are done. - Mark Deming, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Jay Farrar

One of the founding fathers of the 1990s alt-country movement, Jay Farrar was a founding member of two of the genre's key bands, Uncle Tupelo and Son Volt, though his solo career has made it plain that his musical ambitions stretch far beyond the retro-leaning twang of many of his contemporaries. Farrar was born and raised in Belleville, IL, a small town not far from th... Read more