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Car Wheels on a Gravel Road

Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
  • List Price: $29.98
  • Buy New: $21.62 (On sale from $21.66)
  • as of 2/11/2012 08:57 EST details
  • You Save: $0.04
In Stock
New (21) Used (12) from $16.47
  • Seller:-importcds
  • Sales Rank:62,625
  • Format:Extra tracks, Original recording remastered
  • Language:English (Original Language)
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:2
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.4
  • Dimensions (in):5.5 x 5 x 0.7
  • Release Date:October 24, 2006
  • UPC:602517045347
  • EAN:0602517045347
  • ASIN:B000IMUY42
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Disc 1 Tracks
  • Right In Time
  • Car Wheels On A Gravel Road
  • 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
  • Drunken Angel
  • Concrete And Barbed Wire
  • Lake Charles
  • Can't Let Go
  • I Lost It
  • Metal Firecracker
  • Greenville
  • Still I Long For Your Kiss
  • Joy
  • Jackson
  • Down The Big Road Blues
  • Out Of Touch
  • Still I Long For Your Kiss
Disc 2 Tracks
  • Pineola
  • Something About What Happens When We Talk
  • Car Wheels On A Gravel Road
  • Metal Firecracker
  • Right In Time
  • Drunken Angel
  • Greenville
  • Still I Long For Your Kiss
  • 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
  • Can't Let Go
  • Hot Blood
  • Changed The Locks
  • Joy


Editorial Reviews:
Synopsis
This is an amazing album!
Amazon.com's Best of 1998
Six years in the making, Car Wheels somehow lives up to its lofty expectations because of Williams's direct songwriting and her wonderfully unaffected vocals. With assistance from cohorts such as Steve Earle, Williams uses the acoustic accents of Dobros, mandolins, slide guitars, and accordions to add color to her grooves, whispers, and rumbles. Her lyrics are undisguised as she presents to us the travelogue of her memory. We can't wait for 2004! --Marc Greilsamer
Amazon.com essential recording
Lucinda Williams makes this whole music thing seem so simple: Write in plain language about the people and places that crowd your memory; add subtle flavors of a mandolin here, a Dobro there, perhaps an accordion or slide guitar; above all, sing as honestly and naturally as you can. Of course, it took her six years to achieve this simplicity, an amazing achievement considering the number of knobs that were turned. Her exquisite voice moans and groans and slips and slides--she delivers a polished tone in a coarse manner. On the superb "Concrete and Barbed Wire," soft acoustic guitars are punctuated by electric slide, accordion, mandolin, and Steve Earle's harmony. Williams's deeply personal stories are matched with bluesy rumbles, raunchy grooves, and plaintive whispers. The entire Deep South is reduced to a sleepy small town filled with ex-lovers, dive bars, and endless gravel roads. --Marc Greilsamer
Amazon.com
This 1998 Grammy-winning release--Lucinda Williams's popular breakthrough--certainly merits the double-disc "deluxe edition" treatment. And it's hard to find significant fault with anything here: the remastered version of the original album, the second-disc live performance from that year featuring guitarists Kenny Vaughn and Bo Ramsey, and the smattering of outtakes (highlighted by a slower, sadder version of "Out of Touch" than the one Williams ended up releasing). Yet the set misses a glorious opportunity to document one of the more laborious (and notorious) recording projects, one that saw Williams switch cities, studios, and producers three times before she was satisfied with the results. And while the results confirm her judgment, fans would likely find it fascinating to hear a lot more takes from the original Austin sessions (featuring accordion master Flaco Jimenez and keyboardist Ian McLagan) or outtakes from the Nashville sessions with producer Steve Earle, before Williams overhauled the project in Los Angeles with Springsteen keyboardist Roy Bittan. Such a set could have put a revelatory spotlight on the creative process that resulted in an album widely regarded as Williams's masterpiece; instead, this release is more like souvenir snapshots. --Don McLeese

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