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The Coal Porters - How Dark This Earth Will Shine (Expanded Edition) (2022)

The Coal Porters - How Dark This Earth Will Shine (Expanded Edition) (2022)

BAND/ARTIST: The Coal Porters

  • Title: How Dark This Earth Will Shine (Expanded Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 2004/2022
  • Label: Cherry Red Records
  • Genre: Bluegrass, Country, Folk Rock, Pop Rock
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:18:17
  • Total Size: 182 mb | 457 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. The Coal Porters - Fair Play, Virginia
02. The Coal Porters - Yonder Over Canaan
03. The Coal Porters - Morning Song
04. The Coal Porters - June Apple Breakdown
05. The Coal Porters - No Tongue Can Tell
06. The Coal Porters - Leaves On The Trees
07. The Coal Porters - Maybe I'll Cry Tomorrow
08. The Coal Porters - Idiot Wind
09. The Coal Porters - Teenage Kicks / Old Joe Clark
10. The Coal Porters - Polly
11. The Coal Porters - New Cut Road
12. The Coal Porters - (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding (Live, Thurso, August 2004)
13. The Coal Porters - Ohio
14. The Coal Porters - Who'll Stop The Rain
15. The Coal Porters - Columbus Stockade Blues
16. The Coal Porters - Columbus Stockade Blues (Instrumental)
17. The Coal Porters - Little Maggie
18. The Coal Porters - Little Maggie (Instrumental)
19. The Coal Porters - Fair And Tender Ladies
20. The Coal Porters - Fair And Tender Ladies (Instrumental)

The Coal Porters started life as a country-accented rock band in the manner of Sid Griffin's best-known project, the Long Ryders, but with time Griffin revamped the group into an acoustic band with strong bluegrass leanings, and How Dark This Earth Will Shine is the first Coal Porters studio set to document this change in direction. While the bluegrass Coal Porters sounded swell on The Chris Hillman Tribute Concerts, which was compiled from live tapes and focused on material associated with the country-rock icon, How Dark This Earth Will Shine is at once a good bit more ambitious and a little less satisfying. Griffin is still a fine and evocative songwriter, as "Fair Play, Virginia" and "Maybe I'll Cry Tomorrow" prove, and he's singing well on these sessions, but the selections from bandmate Pat McGarvey are a bit less impressive, and though the idea of a bluegrass cover of "Teenage Kicks" sounds like fun, the results are underwhelming. The album's real failing, however, is the decided lack of energy that comes through on disc; while the Chris Hillman tribute showed the band catching fire in front of an appreciative audience, all alone in the studio the group is conspicuously lacking in magnetism, and while Griffin's bandmates are solid musicians, there's a "roots music by numbers" feel to many of the cuts that's frankly dispiriting. Sid Griffin deserves to be recognized as one of the key precursors of the alt-country movement, and the best moments of How Dark This Earth Will Shine prove he's still in command of his muse and has more great records left in him. The trouble is, he needs a better set of collaborators if those records are ever going to get made, and this album is enjoyable but ultimately doesn't hit the spot.


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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 20:26
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Many thanks