Gerry Goffin - Back Room Blood (1996)

  • 18 Dec, 10:54
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Back Room Blood
Year Of Release: 1996
Label: Genes
Genre: Blues, Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / APE (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 49:40
Total Size: 125/336 Mb (covers)
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Never Too Late to Rock & Roll
02. Woman Can Be Like a Gangster
03. Elysian Fields
04. Tragedy of the
05. Sacred Heart of Stone
06. Rough Theology
07. One She Ass
08. Death to the Printed World
09. Organized Crime
10. Relief
11. Masquerade
12. I've Got to Use My Imagination

Back in the early 1960s, when Bob Dylan was writing protest songs and inventing folk-rock, Gerry Goffin was penning such pop lyrics as "Will You Love Me Tomorrow?" More than three decades later, Goffin, with help from Dylan and some of his sidemen, made a creditable Dylan-style album in Back Room Blood and filled it with lyrics as embittered as any Dylan ever wrote. The similarities began with Goffin's voice, as hoarse and tuneless as Dylan's, though the closest approximation may be to say that Goffin sounded like Billy DeVille after chain-smoking a pack of Camels. Goffin threw down the gauntlet with the opening track, a by-the-numbers rocker called "Never Too Late to Rock and Roll," and then went through a laundry list of concerns, from relationships to politics and religion, all in a tone of serious-as-death pessimism. Unlike Dylan (who co-wrote two songs, co-produced one of them, and was a sideman), Goffin didn't leaven the vitriol with either humor or any of the pop elements he knew so well, which made the record an extremely sour message from a man with a demonstrated ability to be sweet. Still, if you're looking for the otherwise nonexistent 1996 Bob Dylan album, here it is.