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Butch Hancock - Own & Own (1991)

Butch Hancock - Own & Own (1991)

BAND/ARTIST: Butch Hancock

  • Title: Own & Own
  • Year Of Release: 1991
  • Label: Sugar Hill Records
  • Genre: Folk Rock, Country
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:18:19
  • Total Size: 191/485 Mb
  • WebSite:
Butch Hancock - Own & Own (1991)


Tracklist:

01. Dry Land Farm
02. Wind's Dominion
03. Diamond Hill
04. 1981: A Spare Odyssey
05. Firewater (Seeks Its Own Level)
06. West Texas Waltz
07. Horseflies
08. Horseflies
09. Own & Own
10. Fools Fall In Love
11. Yella Rose
12. Like A Kiss On The Mouth
13. The Ghost Of Give-And-Take Avenue
14. Tell Me What You Know
15. Just A Storm
16. Just Tell Me That
17. When Will You Hold Me Again

Line-up:
Accordion – Ponty Bone
Banjo – Tim McCasland
Bass – Bob Livingston, Bobby Earl Smith, Kenny Maines
Congas, Timbales – Booka Michel
Drums – Frosty, Donnie Maines, Fred KRC
Fiddle – Richard Bowden
Flugelhorn [Pfleugel Horn] – Tommy Anderson
Guitar – David Halley
Harmony Vocals – Jo Ann Parks
Harmony Vocals, Guitar – Joe Ely
Horns – Bill Averbach
Layout – Phil Smee
Piano – Bill Gammil, Marcia Ball
Saxophone – Don Caldwell
Steel Guitar – Lloyd Maines
Trombone, Horns – Tony Pearson
Vocals – Jimmie Dale Gilmore
Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica – Butch Hancock
Vocals, Percussion – Marce Lacouture

American country/folk music recording artist and songwriter, born 12 July 1945 in Lubbock, Texas.

Critics are fond of saying that an artist like Butch Hancock deserves more attention. Hancock, however, never seemed to worry too much about who was listening. At least he didn't until the late '80s, when he allowed Sugar Hill to reissue some of his older material, originally only available on his own small Texas record label. While Own & Own didn't make Hancock a country-folk star, it did give a number of people a chance to find out just how good this eccentric songwriter from Lubbock really was. Drawn from his debut in 1978, "Dry Land Farm" and "West Texas Waltz" show that his Dylan-esque vocals and love of wordplay were born in full from the very start. The spare accompaniment, just acoustic guitar and harmonica, seems to reflect the dry, dusty land he sings about. While the stripped-down production would eventually give way to the roots rock of "Firewater" and the country duets with Marce Lacoutre on "Yellow Rose" and "Like a Kiss on the Mouth," Hancock's basic approach remained the same. The only material that really doesn't work here are the last four cuts, recorded in 1989, the same year as the album's release. The lyrics seem forced and the crunchier guitar raises the noise level, meaning that the two main reasons listeners enjoy Hancock, his clever words and spare country-folk sound, are mysteriously missing. Overall, though, Own & Own offers a good place to sample the peculiar songs of one of the most peculiar songwriters ever to wonder the dusty Texas plains.



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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 15:41
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