Details

Track Listing 1. Intro 2. There Stands the Glass 3. Watch Your Step 4. Strange Conversation 5. Sorry You're Sick 6. Bring It on Home Daddy 7. Big Things 8. Revenge of Scorpio 9. Groovy Little Things 10. Ladder of Success 11. Part Time Love 12. I Got What I Wanted 13. Bad Dog 14. Good and the Bad, The 15. All I Have to Offer You Is Me 16. Long as I Can See the Light 17. Biloxi 18. Lost Ones, The 19. Missin' Mississippi 20. Thing Called Love, A
| Details | | Producer: | Jerry Gordon | | Distributor: | Select-O-Hits | | Recording Type: | Live | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel: Ted Hawkins (vocals, acoustic guitar). Recorded at McCabe's Guitar Shop, Santa Monica, California on November 5, 1994; The Pres House, Madison, Wisconsin on October 8, 1994; Goochi's, Wenatchee, Washington on July 8, 1994. All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology. This collection of solo acoustic performances was recorded live in 1994, just months before Hawkins's death. After a checkered recording career and years spent performing his unique brand of soul tinged with country and blues for passersby at Venice Beach, California, Hawkins finally reached the masses with his music via the spacious coffers of DGC Records. This live album, though, captures him at his most riveting, using only his acoustic guitar and gritty, Sam Cooke-cum-Richie Havens vocal styling to deliver 20 mostly self-penned tunes. From the country-tinged self-pity of Webb Pierce's "There Stands The Glass" to the brutally realistic portrait of life below the poverty line on Hawkins's own "Sorry You're Sick," the singer comes across like a force of nature, with no possible obstacles separating him from the direct, intense delivery of the song. Ultimately, his message is one of faith and salvation, both earthly and spiritual, as evinced on "A Thing Called Love" and John Fogerty's "Long As I Can See The Light."
Industry Reviews ...compellingly document[s] the earthy genius of the late folk-bluesman, who crafted a life of intense hardship into a stylistically diverse, remarkably expressive body of work....demonstrates the vetern busker's uncanny ease as a live performer. - Rating: A Entertainment Weekly (01/30/1998)
...compellingly document[s] the earthy genius of the late folk-bluesman, who crafted a life of intense hardship into a stylistically diverse, remarkably expressive body of work....demonstrates the vetern busker's uncanny ease as a live performer. Entertainment Weekly (01/30/1998)
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