Product Details
Insurgent Country, Vol. 3: Nashville, The Other Side Of The Alley

Insurgent Country, Vol. 3: Nashville, The Other Side Of The Alley
Various Artists

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Track Listing

  1. Hank Williams Memorial Myth - Tom House
  2. Open Flame - Tim Carroll
  3. Daddy's Jail - Phil Lee,
  4. Your Red Wagon - Paul Burch,
  5. Roy - R.B. Morris
  6. God-Shaped Hole - Hayseed
  7. Hillbilly Train - Sonny George,
  8. One Last Question - Jason & the Scorchers,
  9. Cocktail Napkin - Duane Jarvis
  10. Whitey - Lambchop
  11. Cole Durhew - Tom House, Tom House
  12. Try It Again
  13. Lonely at the Top - Dan Baird
  14. Safe in Your Arms - Greg Garing
  15. Rise and Shine - Kristi Rose
  16. Plans We Made - Lonesome Bob
  17. No Ammunition - Gwil Owen
  18. Those I'll Provide

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #347926 in Music
  • Released on: 1996-08-20
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

You'll fall in love with at least five of these artists4
Volume three of "Insurgent Country" delivers a good collection of Americana. The twang spectrum runs from mild to wild. Selections by artists like Dan Baird, Tim Carroll and Phil Lee almost sound like Southern Rock. On the other end, artists like Lambchop keep the flag of real, authentic twang flying high. Paul Burch's 'Hayseed' represents Bluegrass, while Kristi Rose & The Handsome Strangers play Western Swing. Gwil Owen's 'No Ammunition' holds down the fort for Rockabilly while Greg Garing plays a tune that will make the heart of any old-time Country fan melt. R.B. Morris's 'Roy' will resonate with fans that enjoy Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Review period. Volume three contains many great songs. One of the highlights may be Sonny George's 'Hillbilly Train.' Despite borrowing heavily from 'Mystery Train,' it's a song that can run through this listener's mind for hours. Representing Alt-Country, Duane Jarvis' 'Cocktail Napkin' is another stand-out. The drawback to a collection this eclectic is that most listeners will enjoy some performers a lot more than others. It's the spaghetti approach: throw it all on the wall and hope that something sticks. In this respect, volume three is an effective sampler. "Insurgent Country" is sure to turn any listener of Americana onto multiple new artists.