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Countrypolitan favorites [sound recording] / Southern Culture on the Skids.

By: Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: YEP 2124 | Yep Roc RecordsPublication details: [Chapel Hill, NC] : Yep Roc Records ; [S.l.] : Distributed by Redeye, p2007.Description: 1 sound disc : digital ; 4 3/4 inSubject(s):
Contents:
Oh lonsome me -- Muswell hillbilly -- Funnel of love -- Wolverton Mountain -- Rose garden -- Let's invite them over -- Life's a gas -- Te ni nee ni nu -- Tombstone shadow -- Have you seen her face -- No longer a sweetheart of mine -- Engine engine #9 -- Fight fire -- Tobacco Road -- Happy Jack.
Production credits:
  • Produced by Rick Miller.
Southern Culture on the Skids; with additional musicians.
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Main Library CD COUNTRY Southern Culture on the Skids Checked out 06/20/2024 33111005327339
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

When a veteran band follows up a live album with a collection of covers, it's hard not to wonder if they're running short on ideas, but while Southern Culture on the Skids may not be generating much in the way of new material, 2007's Countrypolitan Favorites shows they're still playing (and singing) up a storm. Featuring 15 tunes associated with other artists, Countrypolitan Favorites belies its own title with the diverse variety of material on board; no one familiar with SCOTS's tongue-in-cheek hillbilly shtick will be surprised by the covers of "Oh Lonesome Me," "Wolverton Mountain" or "Tobacco Road," but the group also reveals some unexpected influences on this set. Rick Miller and Mary Huff offer some lovely languid harmonies on the T. Rex classic " "Life's a Gas," the band delivers the Kinks' "Muswell Hillbilly" with a potent blend of twang and soulful respect, and Miller's typically superb guitar work shines on a reverb-soaked interpretation of the Byrds' "Have You Seen Her Face." SCOTS's gift for navigating swampy grooves is also on display on their versions of "Te Ni Nee Ni Nu" and "Funnel of Love," and it's hard to believe it has taken them this long to get around to recording George Jones' paean to the joys of mate swapping, "Let's Invite Them Over." As always, Rick Miller is a firebrand guitarist with chops, taste and a sense of humor, and Mary Huff and Dave Hartman are a killer, no-nonsense rhythm section, while Miller's production injects just the right amount of pop-friendly intelligence when it's needed. A few new songs would have been a nice addition to Countrypolitan Favorites, but there's no arguing that Southern Culture on the Skids know how to pick a song that works for them, and this album is a hoot for anyone who has embraced their Dixie-fried aesthetic. ~ Mark Deming

Compact disc.

Oh lonsome me -- Muswell hillbilly -- Funnel of love -- Wolverton Mountain -- Rose garden -- Let's invite them over -- Life's a gas -- Te ni nee ni nu -- Tombstone shadow -- Have you seen her face -- No longer a sweetheart of mine -- Engine engine #9 -- Fight fire -- Tobacco Road -- Happy Jack.

Produced by Rick Miller.

Southern Culture on the Skids; with additional musicians.

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