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Nell Robinson - On the Brooklyn Road (2011)

Nell Robinson - On the Brooklyn Road (2011)

BAND/ARTIST: Nell Robinson

  • Title: On the Brooklyn Road
  • Year Of Release: 2011
  • Label: Red Level Records
  • Genre: Folk, Country, Americana
  • Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:47:14
  • Total Size: 231 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. Swamp-talk (Feat. Uncle Marc)
02. Woe is Me
03. Mayflies
04. Red Clay Creek
05. Babysitter (Feat. Uncle Bill & Mom)
06. Don't Light My Fire
07. I'm Brilliant
08. The Sharpest Knife (Feat. Mom & Uncle Bill)
09. Wahatchee
10. I'm a Honky Tonk Girl
11. Poker Game (Feat. Uncle Bill & Mom)
12. I Saw the Light
13. Can't Help Falling in Love with You
14. Radio Reception (Feat. Uncle Marc)
15. Turn Your Radio On
16. The Last Old Shovel
17. Grown Man Cry (Feat. Uncle Marc)
18. Sweet Sunny South
19. Crawdad Song (Feat. The Henriettas)
20. Big Ball in Texas (Feat. The Henriettas)
21. Directions (Feat. Uncle Marc)

Berkeley, CA – Bluegrass singer-songwriter Nell Robinson proudly announces the upcoming release of her sophomore
CD, "Nell Robinson On the Brooklyn Road" on July 19, 2011. After her debut album Loango charted in bluegrass and Americana in 2010, Nell Robinson was named one of the most "utterly charming," "freshest voices" in roots music, and likened to early Emmylou Harris and Hazel Dickens. With "On The Brooklyn Road", titled after the red clay dirt road that led to her family’s farm in rural Alabama, Nell returns with more of her original compositions.

On her second album, Robinson musically collaborates and performs with a veritable "Who's Who" of renowned bluegrass icons including: Jim Nunally, Laurie Lewis, John Reischman, Chad Manning, Keith Little and Rob Ickes, among many others. "On the Brooklyn Road" includes serious tales of death, heartbreak and affectionate storytelling of family traditions. The tunes are lled with warmth, sweetness, humor and simple elegance.

There is a timelessness and deftness to Nell Robinson's original song-writing style. She evokes a by-gone era mixed with a modern twist to her lyrics. This is evidenced by the Cajun- avored song about temptation “Don’t Light My Fire” to her co-write with Laurie Lewis, "Wahatchee" to “I’m Brilliant" about the denial of alcoholism. Nell's vocal skills range from haunting and melodic to soulful and spare.

On the Brooklyn Road was produced by Nell and by Jim Nunally, who also adds splendid harmonies that complement Robinson’s warm clear-as-a-bell lead vocals. Just listen to their chemistry on Richard Brandenburg’s tender ballad “May ies, ” a highlight of the album. The album’s songs are interspersed with field recordings of stories by her mother and uncles about an innocent time long since passed. Nell sings in the name of her late grandmother and as a way to honor her Southern ancestry.

The CD closes almost like a Southern revival with “Last Old Shovel” and “Sweet Sunny South”. As on Nell’s first album Loango, there are 2 bonus tracks by The Henriettas, which is her and Cary Sheldon’s tribute to the 1930’s sister act, the DeZurik Sisters. Their funny and intricate yodeling style has to be heard to be believed.

In Nell Robinson's liner notes she writes "Story-telling is a Southern pastime and some of the stories I know are best told like they happened yesterday, even though they are 150 years old. They foster this deep connection to people and place, so much that sometimes I miss a past that I wasn't even present for. The family recordings and songs, mine and others, in this album are my way of breathing those memories into life today." Let Nell Robinson breathe her nostalgic memories, stories and songs into your ear with the eloquent sounds of On the Brooklyn Road!

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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 19:49
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Many thanks