Английская Википедия:Buffalo Nickel (album)

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Шаблон:Infobox album Buffalo Nickel is an album by the American musician Dan Baird, released in 1996.[1][2] The first single was "Younger Face".[3] Baird supported the album with a North American tour.[4]

Production

The album was produced by Brendan O'Brien, who also played guitar.[5][6] Baird cowrote or wrote nine of the songs; he ignored musical trends when forming the songs.[7][8] Two songs were written by Terry Anderson, Baird's bandmate in the Yayhoos.[9] Georgia Satellite Mauro Magellan played drums.[10] "Hush" is a cover of the song made famous by Deep Purple, with backing vocals by Joe South.[11][12] "I Want You Bad" is a cover of the NRBQ song.[13] "Cumberland River" and "Younger Face" are about washed-up characters.[14] "Hell to Pay" is about a friend who destroys his life.[15] The album contains a hidden track about a Tennessee state park.[16]

Critical reception

Шаблон:Music ratings The Atlanta Journal-Constitution wrote that "Dan Baird plays guitar like the cockiest rooster stalking the walk and sings like a Faces-era Rod Stewart weaned on stock car races and homemade sin."[17] The Denver Post determined that Baird "is making the kind of footstomping, rude, seat-of-the-pants rock 'n' roll you hardly hear anymore."[18] The New York Times concluded that, "in an era of grunge power chords, he's dedicated to twangy, down-home, cowbell-socking rockers steeped in Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones."[14] The Los Angeles Times deemed the album "not profound, exactly, but a sloppy good time."[19]

Stereo Review noted that "Baird's an old-school rocker who kicks the blues and boogie around with a salty wit underscored by a love of the sweaty, footstompin' fun that can be had when guitars, bass, and drums fall into the lockstep of Faces and Humble Pie by way of Sun and StaxVolt."[20] The Toronto Star stated that "Baird remains one of southern rock's finest writers of toe-tapping tunes and dispensers of home truths."[21] The Austin American-Statesman opined that O'Brien "seems obsessed with trying to keep the careers of former Georgia Satellites alive ... [he] only helps point out why the Satellites were one-hit wonders."[13]

AllMusic wrote that "Baird's approach is so basic it borders on the generic, except when he comes up with striking lyrics to supplement the simple sound."[11]

Track listing

Шаблон:Track listing

References

Шаблон:Reflist Шаблон:Authority control

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