| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 54023 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $7.92 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 2006-02-28 |
| Label: | Wounded Bird Records |
| UPC: | 664140695320 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Wounded Bird Records |
| ASIN: | B000CSUMCG |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on Learn to Love It by Wounded Bird Records
- Wake Me
- Every Word You Say
- How Far To The Horizon?
- L'air De La Louisane
- Mississippi, You're On My Mind
- Third Rate Romance
- Defying Gravity
- Tell Me Why You Like Roosevelt
- Pharoah's Army
- Laisse Les Bons Temps Rouler
- The End Is Not In Sight
- I Can't Stand Up Alone
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Album Description
Jesse Winchester is a sort of folk/rock singer/songwriter who issued numerous albums for the Bearsville label throught the 70's & early 80's. "Learn To Love It" was originally released in 1974.
Amazon.com
A lyrical tenor with a courtly Southern drawl. Songs steeped in deft gospel, folk, country, and R&B influences in elegantly spare settings. An underlying intelligence, mixing romantic reverie with vignettes that convey a palpable sense of place, and sketch wonderful characters with moments of low-keyed, shaggy dog humor. If that sounds like Lyle Lovett, you're more than 20 years late. Louisiana-born, Memphis-bred Jesse Winchester was a conscientious objector viewing his rootsy origins and contemporary American life from his Montreal exile when writing this, his third solo album, and it glows with an easy charm undiminished by the intervening years. Songs include meditations on spirit ("How Far to the Horizon,") and homeland ("Mississippi You're on My Mind"), patriotism, and faith. Blame Winchester's lack of careerism and Canadian operating theater for his relative obscurity--like its two predecessors, this is a deeply satisfying exploration of faith and roots that sounds prescient against the current backdrop of questing American roots rock. --Sam Sutherland
Customer Reviews
Lyle Lovett's doppelganger - Reviewed on 1998-05-25
6 customers found this review helpful.
Long before the Long Tall Texan copped big league cred as a smart, funny, courtly, intelligent singer-songwriter, Memphis' Jesse Winchester set a really high bar on rootsy Southern music. I still remember soaking up his debut album in my dorm room, and after graduation I eagerly sought each of the succeeding albums from this overlooked master. A conscientious objector who observed life from exile in Montreal, he may have missed the singer-songwriter boom of the '70s, but not for any lack in quality. This was his third album, mixing his own great songs with the first songs from Russell Smith, another neglected Southern master, who made some great, now unavailable records with the Amazing Rhythm Aces.
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Book Subjects
- Folk
- Folk & Traditional
- Pop
- Pop/Rock Music
- Singer/Songwriter