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Steve Forbert, Mission of the Crossroad Palms CD cover artwork

Steve Forbert, Mission of the Crossroad Palms

Audio CD

Disk ID: 1016368

Disk length: 40m 7s (12 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1995

Label: Unknown

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Tracks & Durations

1. It Sure Was Better Back Then 2:58
2. It Is What It Is (And That's All) 3:31
3. Is It Any Wonder? 3:20
4. Lay Down Your Weary Tune Again 3:08
5. So Good To Feel Good Again 2:56
6. Oh, To Be Back With You 4:41
7. Real Live Love 3:48
8. The Trouble With Angels 3:50
9. How Can You Change The World? 3:01
10. Don't Talk To Me 2:33
11. The Last Rays Of Sunlight 3:35
12. Thirteen Blood Red Rosebuds 2:38

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

In 1976, Steve Forbert came to New York from Jimmie Rodgers's hometown of Meridian, Mississippi, with a harmonica, an acoustic guitar and a guitar case of terrific songs. His debut album, "Alive on Arrival," was released in '78, and Forbert has been trying to live up to its tremendous promise ever since. He finally fulfilled his talent with Mission of the Crossroad Palms," the best album of his career. His first recording in three years (and only his third in 13), it preserves the breezy charm of his early work while stripping it of all its callow glibness. Instead of puffing up the importance of his subject matter, Forbert is more likely to deflate it. Forbert, once tagged "the new Dylan," now more closely resembles John Prine in these bouncy country folk tunes and in such down-to-earth aphorisms as "It Is What It Is (And That's All)."

Forbert works best in folk rock arrangements which sketch out the harmonies and rhythms with a minimalism which matches his wispy voice. E Street Band alumnus Garry Tallent--who also produced Forbert's second-best album, 1988's "Streets of This Town"--gives the singer just the lean support he needs. But mostly the album works because it harvests Forbert's best-ever crop of songs: the ironic reflections of a retired railroad worker, "It Sure Was Better Back Then"; a hooky shuffle about relighting an old flame, "Lay Down Your Weary Tune Again"; and the Gothic imagery of the apology ballad, "Oh, To Be Back with You." --Geoffrey Himes

Other Versions

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.

Mission of the Crossroad Palms

Tracks: 12, Disk length: 40m 7s

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