Brownsville Station - Motor City Connection (2007)
BAND/ARTIST: Brownsville Station
- Title: Motor City Connection
- Year Of Release: 2007
- Label: Rhino Atlantic
- Genre: Boogie Rock, Glam Rock
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:38:03
- Total Size: 250 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Automatic Heartbreak
02. One That Got Away
03. Self Abuse
04. Crazy Legs
05. Give It to Get It
06. Combination Boogie
07. Load of Love
08. You Know Better
09. They Call Me Rock 'N' Roll (They Call Me Rock 'N' Roll, Pt. 1 / God Bless Rock 'N' Roll / Can't Wait for Friday Night / Welcome / They Call Me Rock 'N' Roll, Pt. 2)
If Yeah! and School Punks were nonstop parties, Brownsville Station's fifth album, Motor City Connection, is the hangover, the one where the group reckons with the aftermath of having a good time all of the time. Most of the original numbers are racked in guilt, heartbreak, and self-recrimination, tales of broken hearts and loneliness, highlighted by the moody and driving opener, "Automatic Heartbreak," the bitter yet swaggering "Self Abuse," and the proto-power ballad "You Know Better." In between these moments of introspection are a couple of good covers - J.B. Hutto's "Combination Boogie" and the Little Walter instrumental "Crazy Legs" - and the album ends with the suite "They Call Me Rock 'n' Roll," a nine-minute epic that is the closest old-time rock & roll ever came to art rock. Cub Koda is now firmly the band's frontman - Michael Lutz only sings a segment of "They Call Me Rock 'n' Roll" - and the group is more musically ambitious here, trying a little bit of everything. Not only is there the aforementioned suite, but there's a variety of guitar sounds; it's not all pedal-to-the-metal distortion. There are some synthesizers in the mix and the entire sound has been streamlined, so it's sleek and hard-hitting, bringing them away from their patented boogie rock and closer to the mid-'70s mainstream. While the bandmembers were most at home tearing it up - as evidenced by the hardest-rocking numbers here - they still sounded good with a little more polish, and that variety makes Motor City Connection one of Brownsville Station's more intriguing albums, even if it's not among their most consistent.
01. Automatic Heartbreak
02. One That Got Away
03. Self Abuse
04. Crazy Legs
05. Give It to Get It
06. Combination Boogie
07. Load of Love
08. You Know Better
09. They Call Me Rock 'N' Roll (They Call Me Rock 'N' Roll, Pt. 1 / God Bless Rock 'N' Roll / Can't Wait for Friday Night / Welcome / They Call Me Rock 'N' Roll, Pt. 2)
If Yeah! and School Punks were nonstop parties, Brownsville Station's fifth album, Motor City Connection, is the hangover, the one where the group reckons with the aftermath of having a good time all of the time. Most of the original numbers are racked in guilt, heartbreak, and self-recrimination, tales of broken hearts and loneliness, highlighted by the moody and driving opener, "Automatic Heartbreak," the bitter yet swaggering "Self Abuse," and the proto-power ballad "You Know Better." In between these moments of introspection are a couple of good covers - J.B. Hutto's "Combination Boogie" and the Little Walter instrumental "Crazy Legs" - and the album ends with the suite "They Call Me Rock 'n' Roll," a nine-minute epic that is the closest old-time rock & roll ever came to art rock. Cub Koda is now firmly the band's frontman - Michael Lutz only sings a segment of "They Call Me Rock 'n' Roll" - and the group is more musically ambitious here, trying a little bit of everything. Not only is there the aforementioned suite, but there's a variety of guitar sounds; it's not all pedal-to-the-metal distortion. There are some synthesizers in the mix and the entire sound has been streamlined, so it's sleek and hard-hitting, bringing them away from their patented boogie rock and closer to the mid-'70s mainstream. While the bandmembers were most at home tearing it up - as evidenced by the hardest-rocking numbers here - they still sounded good with a little more polish, and that variety makes Motor City Connection one of Brownsville Station's more intriguing albums, even if it's not among their most consistent.
Blues | Rock | FLAC / APE
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