Nanci Griffith - The Last of the True Believers [1986] [EAC/FLAC
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- Audio > FLAC
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- 15
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- 196.71 MiB (206263085 Bytes)
- Tag(s):
- americana country folk
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- 2014-06-14 12:49 GMT
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- dickspic
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- Info Hash: E558C77715CF152EE772E58284E43FB8A6B51990
FLAC / Lossless / Log 100%/ Cue Label/Cat#: New Rounder / Philo / Universal Division #CDPH 1109 Country: USA Year: October 25, 1990 Genre: americana,Country Format: CD,Album 1 The Last Of The True Believers 2:47 2 Love At The Five & Dime 4:33 3 St. Olav's Gate 3:03 4 More Than A Whisper 3:42 5 Banks Of The Pontchartrain 3:39 6 Lookin' For The Time (Workin' Girl) 2:43 7 Goin' Gone 4:19 8 One Of These Days 2:54 9 Love's Found A Shoulder 2:19 10 Fly By Night 2:36 11 The Wing & The Wheel 2:41 This is Nanci Griffith's fourth and final release on Rounder Records' folk subsidiary, Philo. At the time Griffith relocated to Nashville, TN, her decidedly Texan sense of musicality had already begun developing subtle hues of Appalachia as well as the cosmopolitan country that would inform her mid- to late-'80s stint on MCA. However, it is the overwhelming strength and conviction in the singer/songwriter's original material on The Last of the True Believers that remain indelibly impressed upon enthusiasts and critics alike. As such, Griffith has retained a copious sampling from the disc in her subsequent live performance repertoire. Griffith's crystalline vocals are well matched to the warm, earthy acoustic instrumentation on the intimate "More Than a Whisper" and "The Wing and the Wheel." At times, the delicate interplay creates a mutual envelopment of the human vocal instrument with that of the stringed nature -- most notably on the heartfelt "Love at the Five and Dime." By way of contrast, Griffith defies her somewhat introverted image on the tongue-in-cheek (no pun!) love song "Looking for the Time (Workin' Girl)" and the effervescent waltz "Love's Found a Shoulder." Lying nestled between are spry melodies such as "Banks of the Pontchartrain," featuring some nice picking from Béla Fleck (banjo), and "Goin' Gone," which perfectly captures some of Lloyd Green's finest pedal steel work on the disc. Griffith's pure and otherwise unaffected performance style would continue to carry through her subsequent efforts, most notably Lone Star State of Mind (1987), which in many ways is a companion, rather than simply the follow-up, to The Last of the True Believers.