NFOmation.net - Your Ultimate NFO Upload Resource! Viewing NFO file: 00-emmylou_harris_and_rodney_crowell-the_traveling_kind-2015.nfo 00-emmylou_harris_and_rodney_crowell-the_traveling_kind-2015

Artist: Emmylou Harris And Rodney Crowell
Album: The Traveling Kind
Bitrate: 226kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: Nonesuch
Genre: Country
Size: 69.25 megs
PlayTime: 0h 40min 35sec total
Rip Date: 2015-05-19
Store Date: 2015-05-12

Track List:
--------
01. The Traveling Kind               3:40
02. No Memories Hanging Round        3:41
03. Bring It On Home To Memphis      3:37
04. You Can't Say We Didn't Try      3:26
05. The Weight Of The World          4:34
06. Higher Mountains                 4:11
07. I Just Wanted To See You So Bad  3:02
08. Just Pleasing You                4:21
09. If You Lived Here, You'd Be      2:59
    Home Now
10. Her Hair Was Red                 2:42
11. La Danse de la Joie              4:22

Release Notes:
--------
Maybe it was just a matter of momentum. It took Emmylou Harris and Rodney
Crowell close to four decades to get around to making a duets album after the
two first started working together in the mid-'70s, when he became a guitarist
and frequent songwriter with her Hot Band. But just two years after releasing
2013's Old Yellow Moon, Harris and Crowell have the ball rolling again with The
Traveling Kind, another album built around their easy but heartfelt creative
interplay as both vocalists and songwriters. Harris and Crowell co-wrote six of
The Traveling Kind's 11 songs, and tunes like "You Can't Say We Didn't Try" and
the title track reflect Harris' sweet, firm, very human tone as well as
Crowell's outwardly cocky but inwardly perceptive voice, and the sweet and sour
push and pull complements them both. Harris has been singing Crowell's songs for
years, but their collaborative efforts have a special sort of gravity when they
bring their voices together, as her heavenly tone merges with his earthier
instrument. Harris and Crowell also throw a few covers into the mix, and their
interpretations of Lucinda Williams' "I Just Wanted to See You So Bad" and Amy
Allison's "Her Hair Was Red" are sung with the enthusiasm and care of fans who
love and respect the material they're bringing to life. And though several of
the cuts reflect the moodier, more atmospheric sound Harris first embraced with
Wrecking Ball (the loose, ghostly sound of "The Weight of the World" is one of
the album's most satisfying moments), they still find room for some rough and
sweet honky tonk workouts, and "If You Lived Here, You'd Be Home Now" would be a
C&W hit in an earlier, better era. Old Yellow Moon didn't sound like the event
some people were expecting it to be, and the same can be said of The Traveling
Kind, but that's mainly because, good as it is, The Traveling Kind never sounds
fussed over. Instead, this is the work of two close friends and trusted
collaborators who readily fall into a groove when they work together. They don't
appear to be aiming for a masterpiece; instead, they wanted to write some good
songs and let them shine in the studio, and on that level, The Traveling Kind is
a rousing success and a deeply satisfying work.



This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net

Artist: Emmylou Harris And Rodney Crowell
Album: The Traveling Kind
Bitrate: 226kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: Nonesuch
Genre: Country
Size: 69.25 megs
PlayTime: 0h 40min 35sec total
Rip Date: 2015-05-19
Store Date: 2015-05-12

Track List:
--------
01. The Traveling Kind               3:40
02. No Memories Hanging Round        3:41
03. Bring It On Home To Memphis      3:37
04. You Can't Say We Didn't Try      3:26
05. The Weight Of The World          4:34
06. Higher Mountains                 4:11
07. I Just Wanted To See You So Bad  3:02
08. Just Pleasing You                4:21
09. If You Lived Here, You'd Be      2:59
    Home Now
10. Her Hair Was Red                 2:42
11. La Danse de la Joie              4:22

Release Notes:
--------
Maybe it was just a matter of momentum. It took Emmylou Harris and Rodney
Crowell close to four decades to get around to making a duets album after the
two first started working together in the mid-'70s, when he became a guitarist
and frequent songwriter with her Hot Band. But just two years after releasing
2013's Old Yellow Moon, Harris and Crowell have the ball rolling again with The
Traveling Kind, another album built around their easy but heartfelt creative
interplay as both vocalists and songwriters. Harris and Crowell co-wrote six of
The Traveling Kind's 11 songs, and tunes like "You Can't Say We Didn't Try" and
the title track reflect Harris' sweet, firm, very human tone as well as
Crowell's outwardly cocky but inwardly perceptive voice, and the sweet and sour
push and pull complements them both. Harris has been singing Crowell's songs for
years, but their collaborative efforts have a special sort of gravity when they
bring their voices together, as her heavenly tone merges with his earthier
instrument. Harris and Crowell also throw a few covers into the mix, and their
interpretations of Lucinda Williams' "I Just Wanted to See You So Bad" and Amy
Allison's "Her Hair Was Red" are sung with the enthusiasm and care of fans who
love and respect the material they're bringing to life. And though several of
the cuts reflect the moodier, more atmospheric sound Harris first embraced with
Wrecking Ball (the loose, ghostly sound of "The Weight of the World" is one of
the album's most satisfying moments), they still find room for some rough and
sweet honky tonk workouts, and "If You Lived Here, You'd Be Home Now" would be a
C&W hit in an earlier, better era. Old Yellow Moon didn't sound like the event
some people were expecting it to be, and the same can be said of The Traveling
Kind, but that's mainly because, good as it is, The Traveling Kind never sounds
fussed over. Instead, this is the work of two close friends and trusted
collaborators who readily fall into a groove when they work together. They don't
appear to be aiming for a masterpiece; instead, they wanted to write some good
songs and let them shine in the studio, and on that level, The Traveling Kind is
a rousing success and a deeply satisfying work.



This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net


<Mascot>

aa21