Product Details
Pontiac

Pontiac
Lyle Lovett

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Product Description

No Description Available.
Genre: Country & Western
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 26-AUG-1988

Track Listing

  1. If I Had a Boat
  2. Give Back My Heart
  3. I Loved You Yesterday
  4. Walk Through the Bottomland
  5. L.A. County
  6. She's No Lady
  7. M-O-N-E-Y
  8. Black and Blue
  9. Simple Song
  10. Pontiac
  11. She's Hot to Go

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6833 in Music
  • Brand: LOVETT,LYLE
  • Released on: 1990-10-25
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential recording
Pontiac is Lyle Lovett's finest album, but it still contains the strengths and weaknesses that have become Lyle's hallmarks. Crack playing, keen observations and clever lyrics, and a neo-traditionalist aesthetic that pulls in everything from Texas folk, honky-tonk and Western swing to old-school pop all shine brightly here, but they're consistently dulled by an ironic distance and a bitterness toward women that approaches misogyny. On Pontiac, the strengths generally win out, however, as Lovett convincingly stalks an old lover ("L.A. County"), says "take my wife, please" ("She's No Lady"), and, on the title track, offers a character sketch that could've been penned by Raymond Carver. --David Cantwell


Customer Reviews

An inconsistent but talented artist turns in his best work5
Lyle Lovett is generally a skilled songwriter who draws from several modes of music that many of his contemporaries have abandoned: Western swing, big band pop, postwar jazz and such. Most of his albums are mixed bags, stocked equally with keenly observed story songs and tiresome cliches. "Pontiac" is by far his best album, the one time he manages the shirk the weaknesses of his other work and put together eleven nearly flawless songs. Here is his charactaristic irony, humor, eye for character, sense of whimsy, and fine brush strokes. On songs like "A Simple Song" and "If I Had a Boat"--one of the greatest songs written since Dylan was in his second, "Blood on the Tracks"-era prime--, he weilds a pen like never before or since. In my opinion, none of his other albums (aside perhaps from "Live in Texas") would warrant more than three stars, but this one lands almost accidentally among the best of the 1980's.

A master at the top of his game5
PONTIAC is a wonderful example of how multi-talented an individual Lyle Lovett is. Beginning with the charming "If I Had a Boat," PONTIAC takes a listener on a journey through the many different song styles, all of which Lovett is a master of. Lovett plumbs the depths of a man's soul on the noir tales of "L.A.County" and "Pontiac" and then just as easily creates a sense of fun and exasperation on "Give Back my Heart" and "She's No Lady." PONTIAC captures a master songwriter at the top of his game with haunting lyrics and memorable tunes. Shifting easily from Texas twangs to big band sounds, Lovett creates a sound that encapsulates the true range of the what is known as "country," and he does it better than most.

what "kind of blue" was to jazz, "pontiac" is to country5
I own all of Lyle's albums. This is the first one I ever heard (when I was 5 years old.} It made a very strong impression on me All of his cd's are amazing in their own ways, but I think this one is still the best. I don't like country music, but Lyle has an extremely sophisticated style of songwriting, that incorporates elements of folk, jazz, blues,southern gospel,big band swing, and contemporary country. There is a very sly and smooth quality in Lyle's voice and the way he writes songs that will give you chills. The first song "If I had a boat" is what won me over as a fan. A very catchy and charming folk song with well played twangy guitars. "Give back my heart" is humorous country blues at its best, "I loved you yesterday" is a Texan style country ballad that sounds a little like a Spanish folk song. "Walk through the bottomland" is a great folk song with just the right amount of twang with good harmony vocals from Emmylou Harris {very haunting vibe on this one.} "L.A.County" has an interesting approach, the song is upbeat country, but the lyrics are dark and talk about the killing of an ex lover at her wedding, Matt Rollings plays some great synthesizer on this one. "She's no lady" is a great sly jazzy song. Although it's kind of bitter toward women, its a damn catchy number, good short piano solo too! "Money" is a good blues song about how to get classy women {funny}. Things get darker with "black and blue" very sly with a big band sound you sorta feel like your'e chillin at a smoky jazz club while this song is playing. "simple song" is beautifully morbid. It's a guitar song played around an ominous D minor chord with chilling strings, sounds kinda like Everlast's "What it's like" things get even lonelier and darker with "pontiac" a song with just a guitar and violin about a world war two vet coping with his haunting memories of what he did overseas many years ago... Lyle hits us with the funny and upbeat "she's hot to go" as the closer. If you like this one check out "thats right {your not from Texas}This is an all around awesome listening experience and well recorded/produced album.{I wish MCA would remaster Lyle's first three Cd's, maybe some more pictures or bonus tracks?!} If you like this I would also reccomend Bruce Hornsby's "the way it is" anything by Jim Croce {r.i.p.} and Nick Cave's "the boatman's call." Pontiac is amazing no matter what musical style you enjoy highly recommended!! your cd collection is hurting without it.