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If you've spent your year listening to something other than "rootsy American music," and if you'd like to catch up on what you've been missing, you'll find 10 solid recommendations below:


After You've Gone by The Legendary Shack Shakers

After You've Gone by The Legendary Shack Shakers

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Ever-reliable Nashville band the Legendary Shack Shakers delivers another set filled with wild tales...


rock
Blue Smoke: The Music of Merle Travis by Cousin Harley

Blue Smoke: The Music of Merle Travis by Cousin Harley

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Blue Smoke: The Music of Merle Travis, Cousin Harley's sixth studio effort, was recorded at...


blues country
and 5 other items
     
From Elvis in Memphis by Elvis Presley
From Elvis in Memphis by Elvis Presley
1969 | Country
6
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 190th greatest album of all time
Fairly forgettable soulful country blues album.
  
Here, in no particular order, are Guitar World's picks for the best rock, country and Blues albums or 'roots' music so far this year.

If you've spent your year listening to something other than "rootsy American music," and if you'd like to catch up on what you've been missing, you'll find 10 solid recommendations below:


After You've Gone by The Legendary Shack Shakers

After You've Gone by The Legendary Shack Shakers

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Ever-reliable Nashville band the Legendary Shack Shakers delivers another set filled with wild tales...


rock
Blue Smoke: The Music of Merle Travis by Cousin Harley

Blue Smoke: The Music of Merle Travis by Cousin Harley

(0 Ratings) Rate It

Album Watch

Blue Smoke: The Music of Merle Travis, Cousin Harley's sixth studio effort, was recorded at...


blues country
and 5 other items
     
     
40x40

Ross (3284 KP) rated Gilded Palace of Sin by The Flying Burrito Brothers in Music

Jun 8, 2020 (Updated Apr 12, 2021)  
Gilded Palace of Sin by The Flying Burrito Brothers
Gilded Palace of Sin by The Flying Burrito Brothers
1969 | Rock
6
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 192nd greatest album of all time (462nd in the 2020 list)
Mediocre country/blues album from some former Byrds members. Nothing memorable to me.
  
40x40

Ross (3284 KP) rated Pretender by Jackson Browne in Music

May 11, 2020  
Pretender by Jackson Browne
Pretender by Jackson Browne
2008 | Rock, Singer-Songwriter
8
8.5 (2 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 391st greatest album of all time
Good soft rock / light blues songs ranging from his typical Eagles-like style to ore country songs and even some mariachi hints. An interesting listen.
  
The Sun Records Collection by  Various Artists
The Sun Records Collection by Various Artists
1994 | Country, Soul
7
7.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 311th greatest album of all time
Good selection of soul and country songs from Sun Records. Including a few Elvis Pressley songs, some Jonny Cash and a range of older soul and blues artists.
  
Grievious Angel by Gram Parsons
Grievious Angel by Gram Parsons
1974 | Blues, Rhythm And Blues, Rock
6
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 425th greatest album of all time
A little more towards the country end of the blues spectrum than I would like but a decent album from the former Byrds member, sadly released after his death.
  
Gilded Palace of Sin by The Flying Burrito Brothers
Gilded Palace of Sin by The Flying Burrito Brothers
1969 | Rock
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"It's such a beautiful record. What can I say? Gram Parsons and Chris Hillman from The Byrds did these soul songs like 'Do Right Woman', which was originally recorded by Aretha Franklin and they played it like a country rock song. Also, they took like 'Dark End Of The Street', which was written by Dan Penn, originally for the soul singer James Carr on Goldwax, a Memphis label, which they also recorded in the style of a country rock song. Country rock is often a dirty term, but to turn that into something else, that transformation was incredible. Gram's gentle, soulful voice completely slays me every time! I'm in love with Gram Parsons. I feel like I know him. When I hear him sing, his voice fills me up and makes me feel loved. Admitting that you're broken and sad that a woman left you, feeling vulnerable was rare in music, apart from maybe soul and blues. But rock music was so macho. Gram turned up and wrote these beautiful original songs. It's okay to admit you're weak, it's okay to admit you have a broken heart. A huge influence on me and Primal Scream. Also, when I got married to my wife Katy England, I had Alexander McQueen design for myself and my wife a suit with satin lapels and hemmed embroidery in the trousers and jacket with roses, in tribute to Gram Parsons."

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Night of the Living Dead (1968)
Night of the Living Dead (1968)
1968 | Horror

"Night of the Living Dead was one I saw with my dad. I was 18 years old. It scared the s— out of me. I think my dad and I had to sleep together that night. [laughs] I said, “No, that’s it. I don’t care how big I am!” And what I loved about it, too, was how [George] Romero could just take this film, and do it clearly on a budget, and yet make it work, have this sort of tongue-in-cheek humor with it. So part of what, I think, attracted me to the films I mentioned was not just the films themselves, but how they were made, what they meant politically, on all levels. I’m attracted to all those films that, in a way, engaged us across cultures. So, you look at Night of the Living Dead and you put these people in the 1960s in this pressure cooker, and one of them is the black guy, one of them is the white guy, one of them is the chick, and the brother and sister, and you see what happens. The unspoken subtext of it was huge. It was huge, it was revolutionary. Mutiny on the Bounty was the same thing. And even in films like Redemption Road, where I’ll take the black guy, and he’s the one who’s into country and western, and the white guy, he’s the one who’s into blues, and both of them, along the way, are going to encounter music that informs their personal narrative, and it also informs the musicality of the film. So, along the way they pick up some blues, some gospel, some jazz, and that feeds into the song they play at the end of the movie, the sort of redemptive song. So I think those movies actually speak to what I’m attracted to in film. I just like something that, on some level, even if it’s a horror film, is interesting and redemptive and makes you think."

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Singin' the Blues/The Blues by BB King
Singin' the Blues/The Blues by BB King
1992 | Rock
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I was very fortunate. My dad was a musician, he would take me around to recording studios in Houston. I got to hear some really rippin’ stuff at a very young age. There were all of these rambunctious country artists and guys playing this hod-rod hillbilly music. It blew my mind, as you can imagine. Well, one day we to went ACA Studios, and I got to see BB King play. I must’ve been about seven years old. What a trip! “Needless to say, he made a big impression, and later on, I got ahold of this record, which has always been one of my favorites. Something about it just resonates. The lead lines that BB plays are chilling. Although it’s called ‘Singin’ The Blues,’ on this album I think the guitar really comes to the fore as a strident solo instrument. “It’s often been said that Billy could do more with one note than most guitarists can do with 100, and I think it might have started right here. He had developed his technique so fully - it was so unique and elegant – that he was able to play these ‘blue’ notes on songs that even had almost cha-cha beats. This is a record I never have to rediscover because it never went away"

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