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David Allan Coe - Human Emotions / Spectrum VII (1995)

David Allan Coe - Human Emotions / Spectrum VII (1995)

BAND/ARTIST: David Allan Coe

  • Title: Human Emotions / Spectrum VII
  • Year Of Release: 1995
  • Label: Bear Family Records
  • Genre: Country, Country Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 01:06:44
  • Total Size: 177/425 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
David Allan Coe - Human Emotions / Spectrum VII (1995)


Tracklist:

01. Would You Lay with Me (In a Field of Stone)
02. If This is Just a Game
03. You Can Count on Me
04. Mississippi River Queen
05. Tomorrow Is Another Day
06. Human Emotions
07. (She Finally Crossed Over) Love's Cheatin' Line
08. Whiskey and Women
09. Jack Daniels, If You Please
10. Suicide
11. Rollin' with the Punches
12. On My Feet Again
13. Fall in Love with You
14. What Can I Do
15. Sudden Death
16. Fairytale Morning
17. Seven Mile Bridge
18. Now's the Time (To Fall in Love)
19. Love Is Just a Propose
20. Please Come to Boston

David Allan Coe's seventh and eighth albums for Columbia (documented here on CD by the illustrious Bear Family label from Germany as the fourth issue in their Coe retrospective series) reveal just how influential producer Billy Sherrill became on Coe's sound, and how completely he trusted Sherrill's instincts. Human Emotions, written and recorded after being left by his wife of two years, had Coe offering two sides of his complex feelings of despondency. There is the "Happy Side," comprised of songs written and recorded before his wife left, and in some cases before they even met. The other side is entitled "Suicide" (also the name of the album's final track, the definitive black metal country song), which is a painful examination of one's shortcomings and bitterness after the divorce. Most notable is the re-recording of "Would You Lay With Me (In a Field of Stone)," which is perhaps even more powerful than the original, done four years earlier. Spectrum VII, issued in 1979, barely a year later, is full of beautiful honky tonk songs and whining pedal steel guitars as well as folky country waltzes and progressive country tunes that have as much in common with songwriters such as Jesse Colin Young and Jimmy Buffett as they do with Nash Vegas' finest. There is a corny track -- characteristic of all Coe outings -- as well as the truly definitive version of Dave Loggins' unintentional pop hit "Please Come to Boston." As with all the Coe reissues, this one is chock-full of session photographs and the sound is spectacular. The liner-note essays -- which ceased to be a part of the packaging after the second Bear Family volume -- are missed, though.



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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 22:39
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Many thanks.
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  • gozo2014
  •  wrote in 05:28
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thanx Forma 4 DAC
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 21:22
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Many thanks