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Railroad Earth - Last Of The Outlaws flac mp3 download

Railroad Earth - Last Of The Outlaws flac mp3 download
Title:
Last Of The Outlaws
Musician:
Style:
Bluegrass, Folk, Country
Released:
Country:
MP3 album size:
1927 mb
FLAC album size:
1331 mb
Other formats:
WMA DMF XM ASF AC3 WMA FLAC
Rating:
4.6 ✪

Tracklist

A1 Chasin' A Rainbow
A2 The Last Of The Outlaws
A3 Grandfather Mountain
B1 All That's Dead May Live Again
B2 Introit
B3 Tuba Mirum
B4 Lacrimosa
B5 Dies Irae
B6 Face With A Hole
B7 In Paradisum
C1 When The Sun Gets In Your Blood
C2 Hangtown Ball
D1 Monkey
D2 One More Night On The Road
D3 Take A Bow

Companies, etc.

  • Distributed By – Redeye
  • Manufactured By – Redeye
  • Copyright (c) – Black Bear Records
  • Pressed By – GZ Digital Media – 114263E
  • Recorded At – RR Sound
  • Mixed At – Kingsize Soundlabs
  • Mastered At – Little Red Book Mastering

Credits

  • Acoustic Bass, Electric Bass – Andrew Altman
  • Art Direction – Mark Berger
  • Drums, Vocals – Carey Harmon
  • Engineer – Dean Rickard
  • Guitar, Dobro, Lap Steel Guitar, Banjo, Saxophone, Recorder, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Vocals – Andy Goessling
  • Mandolin, Bouzouki, Piano – John Skehan
  • Mastered By – Mark Chalecki
  • Mixed By – Ted Hutt
  • Producer – Railroad Earth
  • Violin, Viola, Electric Guitar, Accordion, Vocals – Tim Carbone
  • Vocals, Acoustic Guitar – Todd Sheaffer

Notes

Issued in gatefold sleeve with download code.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 634457640719
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A runout laser etched): LP BEAR001 114263E1/A
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B runout laser etched): LP BEAR001 114263E2/A
  • Matrix / Runout (Side C runout laser etched): LP BEAR001 114263E3/A
  • Matrix / Runout (Side D runout laser etched): LP BEAR001 114263E4/A

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
CD-BEAR-001 Railroad Earth Last Of The Outlaws ‎(CD, Album, Dig) Black Bear Records CD-BEAR-001 US 2014
Reviews:
  • Inth
Over 12 years and five previous studio records, Railroad Earth have continually questioned their musical identity. Their sound has evolved to such a degree that what initially "defined" them doesn't remotely encompass all they've become; they continually integrate new genres and combinations of sounds in an aural language of their own design. Last of the Outlaws is an ambitious, mercurial tapestry chock-full of deftly crafted, soulfully played songs, and more. "Chasin' the Rainbow" walks the line between country and bluegrass, but its staggered vocal harmonies, and the knotty interplay between banjo, mandolin, and fiddle, bleed and blur those boundaries. The title track finds frontman/chief songwriter/guitarist Todd Sheaffer folding in jazz harmony and phrasing (in a similar fashion to Pure Prairie League's debut album or Danny O'Keefe's Breezy Stories) in a timeless, elegant pop, played by acoustic guitar, bass, and mandolin, dusted by a forlorn piano, spacious electronic ambience, violin, cello, shimmering cymbals, and woody tom-tom accents. It's among the most beautiful songs in his sheaf. "All That's Dead May Live Again (04-08)" is the lonesome Celtic waltz that commences the labyrinthine 21-minute, seven-part suite at the heart of the record. Before anyone moans "jam band", know that its focus, taut discipline, and musical drama are not only engaging but riveting. There is no inherent circular theme, yet all of its parts are inherently linked. From that Celtic introduction, various folk traditions (from Appalachian to Anglo-Celtic), jazz, modern crossover classical music, country, bluegrass, and rock all enter and slip out the back door with a multitude of instruments -- including reeds and winds making appearances (pay careful attention to "II. Tuba Mirum"). Tempo and key changes, varying sonic textures, and a panorama of dynamics are all illuminated in this tightly constructed mass that nonetheless retains a sense of organic spontaneity while stretching each player to his limit. Closing movement "V. In Paradisum" is based on simple changes. Layers of strings carry an elegiac melody accompanied by banjo, piano, and bass. These are colored by bass drum, plucked mandolins, strummed guitars, and eerie reverb, and the work ends in a very different place than it began -- though ghost traces of its parts remain. The grooving R&B-tinged rocker "Monkey" returns the album to song-oriented terrain and sounds something like Jackson Browne fronting the Band. The sunny, airy, Caribbean-tinged rock and bluegrass in "When the Sun Gets in Your Blood" is another highlight. But the shuffling, backporch country in closer "Take a Bow" features winding dobro above fingerpicked guitars and mandolin, girded by a brushed drum kit. Above it, Sheaffer's baritone generously expresses gratitude and acknowledgment. Though Last of the Outlaws raises RE's music to a wholly different level, it remains rooted in direct communication that transfers emotion without artifice or pretension. This is music that comes from the land and embraces all that heaven will allow.