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Joe Ely, Letter to Laredo
Audio CD
Disk ID: 1574595
Disk length: 51m 50s (11 Tracks)
Original Release Date: 1995
Label: Unknown
View all albums by Joe Ely...
1. All Just To Get To You | 4:15 |
2. Gallo Del Cielo | 7:03 |
3. Run Preciosa | 4:54 |
4. Saint Valentine | 4:09 |
5. Ranches And Rivers | 3:54 |
6. Letter To Laredo | 4:39 |
7. I Saw It In You | 3:52 |
8. She Finally Spoke Spanish To Me | 3:38 |
9. I Ain't Been Here Long | 3:30 |
10. That Ain't Enough | 5:38 |
11. I'm A Thousand Miles From Home | 6:13 |
Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.
Review
As a teenager, Joe Ely wandered about Lubbock, Texas, on weekend nights, listening to the Mexican farm workers strum guitars and sing their lilting corridos. Those formative experiences are reflected in Letter to Laredo, which draws a line of Spanish-American influences--both thematic and musical--from the cowboy music of the West Texas ranch country, across the Rio Grande River to the mariachi music of northern Mexico, and across the Atlantic Ocean to the gypsy music of Spain. In contrast to the hard-edged roots-rock feel of Ely's best known work, this project has an acoustic folk-rock feel, created by the convergence of Teye's flamenco guitar, Ponty Bone's Tex-Mex accordion, Lloyd Maines's honky-tonk steel guitar and Ely's own Dylanesque harmonica. Several of Ely's compositions--most notably "Run Preciosa," "Ranches and Rivers," and the title track--recall Cormac McCarthy's novels about penniless cowboys on the run from the law and angry fathers. In the same vein is Tom Russell's "Gallo del Cielo," a wonderful story-song about a Mexican peasant who steals his village's best fighting cock and carries it across the border in search of his fortune, and Butch Hancock's "She Finally Spoke Spanish to Me," a sequel to an earlier Hancock song recorded by Ely, "She Never Spoke Spanish to Me," which was itself a response to the old standard, "Spanish Is the Loving Tongue." Longtime Ely fan Bruce Springsteen adds high, howling harmonies on two songs, including "All Just to Get to You," a worthy sequel to Ely's "Settle for Love" and "For Your Love." --Geoffrey Himes
Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.
Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 48s (-1m 58s)
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