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Luther Wright & The Wrongs - Rebuild The Wall (2001)

Luther Wright & The Wrongs - Rebuild The Wall (2001)
  • Title: Rebuild The Wall
  • Year Of Release: 2001
  • Label: Back Porch
  • Genre: Alt Country, Bluegrass, Roots
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 01:01:42
  • Total Size: 163/375 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. In the Flesh 2:42
02. The Thin Ice 1:54
03. Another Brick in the Wall (part I) 2:39
04. The Happiest Days of Our Lives 1:03
05. Another Brick in the Wall (part II) 4:01
06. Mother 4:24
07. Goodbye Blue Sky 2:06
08. Empty Spaces 1:46
09. Young Lust 3:57
10. One of My Turns 2:23
11. Don't Leave Me Now 1:55
12. Another Brick in the Wall (part III) 1:25
13. Goodbye Cruel World 0:32
14. Hey You 3:03
15. Is There Anybody Out There 1:24
16. Nobody Home 3:00
17. Vera 0:59
18. Bring the Boys Back Home 1:21
19. Comfortably Numb 3:40
20. The Show Must Go On 1:11
21. In the Flesh 2:32
22. Run Like Hell 2:55
23. Waiting for the Worms 3:00
24. Stop 0:45
25. The Trial 4:50
26. Outside the Wall 2:13

Luther Wright and the Wrongs are a Canadian alternative country and bluegrass band formed in 1998 in Kingston, Ontario.

Rebuild the Wall is a 2001 album by Canadian alternative country band Luther Wright and the Wrongs. The album is a cover of Pink Floyd's progressive rock classic The Wall, reimagining each track as a bluegrass country song. Guests include Sarah Harmer and Carolyn Mark.

Imagine Pink Floyd's The Wall reconstructed from bales of hay. The idea of this concept album translated into a hillbilly hoedown of banjos and fiddles may sound interesting, but the results can wear thin pretty quickly. Part of the problem is that Canada's Luther Wright & the Wrongs don't sound like they have a deep attachment to either classic rock or traditional bluegrass. Instead, this plays like a joke--a Hee Haw skit carried to extremes. While the bittersweet balladry of "The Thin Ice" and the call-and-response of "Mother" adapt surprisingly well to the sound of old-time country, the banjo-driven "Another Brick in the Wall" and the jaunty drive of "Comfortably Numb" put the arrangements at odds with the mood of the material. Consider this release to be curious fallout from the chart-topping success of O Brother, Where Art Thou?, which sold most of its millions of CDs to those raised on rock rather than mountain music. --Don McLeese



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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 20:49
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Many thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 00:02
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Many thanks for Flac.