2007-02-02
Described as a “reminiscence of Bob Dylan, John Prine, The Grateful Dead, Arlo Guthrie and classic country of the forties and fifties” and compared to Wilco, Ryan Adams, and Yonder Mountain Spring Band, Thayer’s brand of newgrass has a touch of all of those mentioned blended into something he can proudly call his own. His writing is imaginative and strong, the music toe-tapping good. Dig the baritone sax in the mix on 4-The Way That It Swings, and the fiddle on 5-Snake Bite, arguably the two best cuts on a very listenable album. -- MostlyCHRISTINE LAVIN
Happydance of the Xenophobe
JOAN OSBORNE
Breakfast in Bed
RICKIE LEE JONES
THE DEVIL YOU KNOW
Mark Knopfler/Emmylou Harris
All The Roadrunning
Waiting For Henry
Town Called Patience
Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder
Honoring the Fathers of Bluegrass : Tribute to 1946 and 1947
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