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The
Starline Rhythm Boys
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Live At Charlie-O's [2008]
Cow Island CIM011
Yellow Jacket / A Dime At A Time / Heartbreak Tennessee / Charlie-O's / On The Back Row / Life Begins At 4 O'Clock / Wine Me Up / Lonesome On'ry And Mean / Pipeliner Blues / You're Still On My Mind / One Foot In The Honky Tonk / She Don't Live Here No More / Dark Hollow / Live And Let Live / Get A Little Goner / Drunk Tank / Playboy / You Can't Catch Me / That's Where I Went Wrong / I'm A Lonesome Fugitive / Gotta Travel On / Too Much Fun / Drink Up And Go Home.
Masquerade For A Heartache [2009]
Cow Island CIM014
Masquerade For Heartache / Jive After Five / Trucker From Tennessee / Workin' Man Blues / Honky Tonk Gal / Red's Place / A Mess Of Blues / Goodbye Train / I'm Fed Up Drinking Here / Ubangi Stomp
Here's the cure to the stress of your everyday life and your summertime blues: the hot rockin' honky tonk swing style of a Starline Rhythm Boys show in your living room! Recorded live at their homebase of Charlie-O's bar, it features a typical set of the trio mixing classics from Johnny Paycheck, Wayne Walker, Conway Twitty, Faron Young, Chuck Berry, Bill Kirchen... with a couple of band's own (She Don't Live Here, Drunk Tank, That's Where I Went Wrong). Add the presence of Sean Mencher (High Noon) to produce an dplay second guitar on one track as well as Kevin Maul on steel (both lap and pedal) and you just have to put the cd in the player and let the fun begins.
Masquerade For A Heartache is the perfect companion to Charlie-O's with 10 more tracks recorded during the same show. Once again it's very well balanced between originals (Masquerade..., Red's Place, I'm Fed Up Drinking Here) and covers of Carl Perkins, Merle Haggard, Elvis. This mini album goes from straight Honky Tonk to Rock'n'roll with a good dose of Rockabilly including one of the best version of Ubangi Stomp I've ever had the chance to listen to!
You can buy them separately but do yourself a favor and buy both.
Fred "Virgil" Turgis
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Red's
Place
Cow Island Music CIM05
A Fighting Chance -
No Gal Cooks Like Mine -
Red's Place - It's
Anyone's Guess - (They're)
Cutting Back the Work
Force - That's Just A
Thought - The Joke's On
You - Who - The Family
Farm - Drunk Tank - Sin
& Salvation - Burning
A Hole In My Mind - The
Old Filling Station -
That's Where I Went Wrong
- I'm Fed Up Drinking
Here - A Memory of Fred
The Starline Rhythm Boys
are a drummerless trio (Danny
Coane, acoustic guitar;
"Big Al"
Lemery, electric guitar;
and Billy Bratcher,
doghouse bass) that plays
in the same league as
High Noon (no wonder to
find Sean Mencher on the
production seat) and
Wayne "The Train"
Hancock (Billy Bratcher
toured with him by the
way). But they don't
stick to the trio format
and bring a couple of
guests to keep things
varied and surprising,
and most of all highly
enjoyable. Most of the
songs are originals
written by Bratcher."A
Fighting Chance" is
a powerfull slap bass led
hillbilly/proto
rockabilly (what a guitar
too) with harmony vocals.
"No Gal Cooks Like
Mine" features a
fiddle in addition to the
steel and praises the
simple domestic joys. The
title track has more of a
late 50's honky tonk feel
with a bit of Buck Owens
in it, still with this
great harmonies, and a
superb piano part.Big Al
Lemery is not only a
wizard on the telecaster,
he's also a poignant
singer and proves it on
"It's Anyone's Guess"
a slow number in the vein
of "Before The Next
Teardrop Falls" with
mandolin, fiddle, light
snare and pedal steel.
"They're Cutting
Back The Work Force"
shows once again what a
good songwriter Billy
Bratcher is, able to
write about booze or
social issues ( I Got
Kids to feed, but there's
no remorse, once they
start cutting the work
force") with equal
success. "That's
Just A Thought" is a
beautiful little
hillbilly bop ditty that
looks toward the western
swing side of things with
each members of the horn
section taking solos.
They turn Jimmy martin's
bluegrass number "The
Joke's On You" into
a uptembo rockabilly.
Another cover is Little
Walter's "Who",
which becomes a "hillbilly-blues"
(and reminds what High
Noon did with "Crazy
Mixed Up World" on
their Texas Style 10").
"Family Farm"
is a sad and beautiful
waltz with bluegrass
accents. Al Lemery wrote
and sings "Drunk
Tank" a nice
hillbilly bop. The honky
Tonk "Sin &
Salvation", on a
well known theme, is
another proof they never
falls into facility. They
bring modulation and
unusual chords. Man
that's good ! Connie
Smith's "Burning A
Hole InMy Mind" adds
a welcome touch of 60's
country music.On "The
Old Filling Station"
with simple words (and a
beautiful melody)
Bratcher paints a
melancholic picture (Do
you remember when you
never pumped your gas/And
the man with the Star was
a symbol of class). I
really enjoyed "I'm
Fed Up Drinking Here",
the best song George
Jones never recorded. How
can't you love a band
that plays right and
sings "The Old Juke
box that I leaned on/Was
a rock for life's hard
knock but now it's gone/When
a man's mind ain't clear/
a lack of George Jones is
severe". The set
ends with a sincere
hommage to a friend of
them, Fred, and you can
feel both the love they
have for him and the
personnality of the man,
even if you never met him.Authenticity
is not only a matter of
music, it's above all a
state of mind. And this
guys play genuine country
music that speaks to your
heart and your feet.
Thank you for that Boys !
Available here.
Fred "Virgil"
Turgis
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