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REVIEWS CD and Show Reviews HeavyHadres.de Feb. 22nd 2010 CD Review by Michael Schindler German translated thru Google Translate Southern Rock is alive! No, not by the unspeakable latest album of the former flagship rockers Lynyrd Skynyrd, but through the windows as we discussed here. The fact that this is also a self-produced debut album, makes it even one step more sympathetic. The five musicians from North Carolina can and will deny any time, by which bands they were mainly affected. The aforementioned Lynyrd Skynyrd as well as one coming to mind as well as Molly Hatchet and .38 Special, which sounds like the end of 2008 formed band does not like a clone of one of these bands, but as a successful mixture of many of these influences. Ronnie Riddle's voice sounds schnapsgeschwängert enough to carry the message of the pieces of a credible, even if he is one of the best singers of this genre. The Twingitarren pepper riffs, hooks, slides, and solos from the sleeve, so that there is only smoke, the Hammond organ-rattling does not sound cheap, but for smoky saloon atmosphere and the rhythm section plays a partially missed the devilish groove. If necessary, also matching the background songs are interspersed, of course, presented by the fair sex. And all this is embedded in an old-fashioned in the best sense of Production, which gives the tracks an appropriate shabbiness. Among the songs will be utilized the full range of genres: Simple, crunchy Southern rockers, bluesgeschw
Not Today
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Livin' Proof
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Old Fashioned Ass Whoopin' Sum Bitch
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That's Just the Whiskey Talkin'
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Brother's Keeper
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Blood From A Stone
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Tractor Pull
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Homegrown Hoedown
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Southern Hospitality
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Mother To Bed
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