B U L L D O G "Crash and Burn"

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  • Опубліковано 8 вер 2024
  • In the tradition of Neil Young, the Band, and Gram Parsons, creating tiers of melody, groove and harmony informed not by textbook conventions but by feeling, Bulldog’s sound springs from a well of traditional American influences that run deeper than ’70s rock ’n’ roll records. As Harsch says, “We’ve just begun to scratch the surface.”
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    B U L L D O G
    Kenny Tudrick - Vocals, Guitars, Harmonica
    Eddie Harsch - Piano, Organ
    Pete Ballard - Steel Guitar
    Jason Rowe - Drums
    Ben Force - Bass
    Singer/songwriter Kenny Tudrick, along with his band Bulldog, struts country-soul-tinged rock ’n’ rollers as well as mournful ballads that resonate far beyond their melancholy chord changes and Neil Young-style folk beats. What’s more, this Tudrick kid (who's played with everyone from King Tuff to Rodriguez to The Go, and who resembles a young Gram Parsons) could inform another half-dozen albums based on his own tough life experiences. Here, he achingly sings of good old-fashioned heartbreak (“Just a Knife in the Back”), exceeding his own limitations (“Crash and Burn”), and living alone in trail-dust country (“South Dakota Sad Eye”). There’s some Nashville shuffle (“Shelter”), a loner anthem (“Badlands”), and Lennonesque rock debauchery (“Blinded”). And damn if “Firefly” isn’t the most beautiful song you’ve never heard. This beautifully executed 11-song stunner feels like a dusty stroll through Topanga Canyon in 1971. (It was first released in 2004 and features Black Crowes organist Eddie Harsch and unsung pedal steel player Pete Ballard.) Old guys like Young and David Crosby could do well to phone up Tudrick for new songs. No joke.
    credits
    released June 27, 2004
    Recorded at The White Room (Detroit)
    Produced by Kenny Tudrick
    Recorded By John Smerek
    Mixed by John Smerek and KT
    photos by Cybelle Codish

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