| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 110904 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $2.50 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 2007-04-05 |
| Label: | Red Parlor |
| UPC: | 837101322034 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Red Parlor |
| ASIN: | B000P2XJYC |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on One Tough Town by Red Parlor
- Whistle Blow
- Sweet Poisons
- Who's The Dummy Now?
- Little Mustang
- No Lies
- Oh Yeah (Dead Man's Shoes)
- Snake Song
- Panama City
- Sweet Potato
- See How The Mighty Have Fallen
- One Tough Town
- Postcard From Mexico
- Rainbow's End
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
Over an impressive professional career spanning four decades, David Olney has built a reputation not as a kind-hearted troubadour, but rather as a performing songwriter with a sharp literary mind that often cuts to the bone of the human condition. Olney's songs have been recorded by an impressive list of artists including Emmylou Harris, Linda Ronstadt, Del McCoury, Lonnie Brooks and many others, winning him a worldwide reputation as one of the best songwriters in America.
Amazon.com
As one of Nashville's undersung treasures--though his material has been recorded by Emmylou Harris and Steve Earle--David Olney merits comparison with the late Townes Van Zandt (whose insidiously insistent "Snake Song" provides a highlight here). Both combine literate precision with a bluesy undercurrent, and a tragic sense of life with a lethal sense of humor. While this may be Olney's bluesiest album to date, it's also his most playful and musically expansive, with Dixieland brass, banjo, and ukulele framing the arrangements. The tropical lilt of the deadpan "Panama City" could pass as low-rent Jimmy Buffett, while the interplanetary comedian conjured on the title cut sounds like one of Randy Newman's narrators. Other songwriting highlights find Olney singing from the perspective of a ventriloquist's dummy on "Who's the Dummy Now?" and revisiting the Bible with "See How the Mighty Have Fallen." And for those who find his voice an acquired taste, just listen to him croon on the closing "Rainbow's End." --Don McLeese
Customer Reviews
One of the Best - Reviewed on 2007-10-30
2 customers found this review helpful.
Olney is an original, a songwriter who crafts his narratives and long songs uniquely, often from the perspective of a character (or a thing in the case of an old song, "Iceberg," the story of the Titanic told from the viewpoint of the iceberg).
On his latest, he typically opens with a blast of bluesy roadhouse rock, "Whistle Blow," fueled by harmonica and his worn voice. But Olney, who is a song writing treasure, has several tricks up his sleeve, as usual. "Who's the Dummy Now" is narrated by the dummy who is carrying the act -- and life -- for a struggling ventriloquist. There's more than a touch of Tin Pan Alley in that cut and a few others -- a trombone, clarinet and tuba make appearances, but so does snarling electric guitar.
The album, in fact, is one tasty sampling of American music. Of "Oh Yeah (Dead Man's Shoes," Olney says: "I think of the song as Flannery O'Conner goes to New Orleans." If that kind of irascible wit and ambition appeals, this is a must.
ALL THE RAGE, Nashville, TN- Wildcards- David Olney - Reviewed on 2007-06-14
3 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.
9 p.m. Fri., June 15, The Basement, $8
What's that word for when there's only one provider of a certain product? A monopoly.
David Olney has a monopoly. He pretty much is a monopoly.
There's only one of him, and thus far nobody has been able to cop his riffs. He often writes songs through characters, with the narrative inhabiting the characters and also usually revealing something of himself. Sometimes that something is heartbreaking, sometimes funny, sometimes other stuff.
If you want something that sounds like David Olney, you've got to find David Olney. He's not hard to find, for the most part. This week he's at The Basement for a show that marks the release of his latest brilliant album, One Tough Town. That album finds him revealing a new batch of gems and also including a harrowing version of late, great old friend Townes Van Zandt's ''Snake Song.'' Van Zandt is one of the luminaries who has lavished mighty praise on Olney. Emmylou Harris has too, and so has Steve Earle, and so has anybody worth his or her salt who has ever witnessed a David Olney show.
Tommy Womack, who has his own little monopoly going, opens for Olney. Highly recommended.
--Peter Cooper
(06/14/07)
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Book Subjects
- Blues
- Contemporary Folk
- Country / Alt-Country
- Folk
- Pop
- Pop/Rock Music
- Rock
- Singer/Songwriter
- Traditional Folk