Artist: The Steel Woods
Album: Old News
Genre: Country, Southern Rock
Release Date: 2019
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 01:08:54
Total Tracks: 15
Total Size: 1,46 GB
Tracklist:
1. The Steel Woods – All of These Years (04:11)
2. The Steel Woods – Without You (04:16)
3. The Steel Woods – Changes (05:55)
4. The Steel Woods – Wherever You Are (06:14)
5. The Steel Woods – Blind Lover (04:17)
6. The Steel Woods – Compared to a Soul (04:34)
7. The Steel Woods – Old News (04:04)
8. The Steel Woods – Anna Lee (04:02)
9. The Steel Woods – Red River (The Fall of Jimmy Sutherland) (01:59)
10. The Steel Woods – The Catfish Song (04:14)
11. The Steel Woods – Rock That Says My Name (06:27)
12. The Steel Woods – One of These Days (04:02)
13. The Steel Woods – Are the Good Times Really Over (I Wish a Buck Was Still Silver) (04:02)
14. The Steel Woods – Whipping Post (05:46)
15. The Steel Woods – Southern Accents (04:44)
Download:
https://xubster.com/7mug47bqhuzi/TheSteelW00ds0ldNews20192496.part2.rar.html
The Steel Woods’ sophomore Thirty Tigers album, Old News, represents a creative leap for the southern roots rock songwriting team of Alabama native Wes Bayliss and his North Carolina partner Jason “Rowdy” Cope, who completed their first recordings barely months after they first met. Recorded in Asheville, NC at Echo Mountain Studios, the site of an old church during a six-day break in a hectic touring schedule, the new album (the follow-up to 2017’s critically acclaimed Straw in the Wind) features more original songs and, for the first time, the whole band participated – including the rhythm section of bassist Johnny Stanton and drummer Jay Tooke – playing in a single room, cutting the tracks virtually live. Part Lynyrd Skynyrd, Allman Brothers, dual-guitar southern blues-rock with elements of R&B, country, bluegrass, gospel, blues, folk and metal, the descriptively named, Nashville-based band deepens its resolve on a theme-driven album that joins the mystery train of the past with the full-speed loco-motion of the present, seeking to bring people together with the universality of music. Conceptually and musically, Old News delivers a set of songs at once eternal with lyrics wrenched from today’s headlines, featuring mythic reverberations and social critiques to boot. The album mourns an idealized past but isn’t afraid to point the way to a better future that enlists the best of both worlds.