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LIST PRICE $14.98 Save 66%
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Format: CD Oct 1996 Record Label: Mammoth Records Recording Type: Studio UPC: 035498014727 |
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In general items shipped via Media Mail should arrive in 2-9 days (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) from the time of shipping * ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Details

Track Listing 1. Self-Sabotage 2. Cappuccino Rosie 3. Drugstore Truck Drivin' Man 4. Going Nowhere 5. Uncertain Girl 6. 2+1 = Nothing 7. Victory Road 8. Kick Me Down 9. Everything Has a Cost 10. To Feel No Love 11. Walking a Vanishing Line 12. Tomorrow Has Come Today 13. Jeremy's Glory 14. I'm Sticking With You
Album Notes Jason & The Scorchers: Jason Ringenberg (vocals, acoustic guitar, harmonica); Warner Hodges (electric & acoustic guitars, timpani, percussion); Jeff Johnson (bass, acoustic guitar); Perry Baggs (drums, background vocals, percussion). Additional personnel: Emmylou Harris (vocals); Fats Kaplin (steel guitar, fiddle). Recorded at Bakos Amp Works, Atlanta, Georgia. The second album Jason and the Scorchers released after their six-year layoff, 1996's CLEAR IMPETUOUS MORNING isn't quite as surprisingly forceful as 1995's A BLAZING GRACE. But where that album focused largely on the cowpunk aspects of their sound, CLEAR IMPETUOUS MORNING has a more varied blend, mixing Stonesy raunch with softer ballads and covers like a rollicking take on Roger McGuinn and Gram Parsons' "Drugstore Truck Drivin' Man." The blazing "Self-Sabotage" and the playful "Cappucino Rosie" are equally fine, and the quartet's twin leaders, yowling singer Jason Ringenberg and scorched-earth guitarist Warner Hodges, show Johnny-come-latelys like the Black Crowes what those groups have been trying to accomplish all along. This is as good as alt-country gets.
Industry Reviews These country punkers once again prove themselves to be the only legitimate living incarnation of the Rolling Stones...MORNING has the haphazard brilliance of a mid-Stones relic like TATTOO YOU... - Rating: A Entertainment Weekly (10/04/1996)
3 Stars (out of 5) - ...the energy level has been pumped back up to the point where the band sounds as excited about what they're doing as they did back in the early-'80s....this is required listening for anybody who truly hates line dancing. Q (12/01/1996)
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