Michael Hurley - Hi Fi Snock Uptown (Reissue) (1972/2013)

  • 06 Nov, 10:33
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Hi Fi Snock Uptown
Year Of Release: 1972/2013
Label: Future Days Recordings
Genre: Folk Rock, Alt-Country, Americana, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 41:43
Total Size: 102/220 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Blue Driver 3:40
02. Water Train 2:56
03. The Sun Is Slowly Sinkin' 3:06
04. Old Black Crow 0:50
05. The Twilight Zone 5:05
06. I'm Worried I'm Worried 3:00
07. In Florida 2:29
08. Mr. Whiskerwits 4:03
09. Lilly Pads Upon The Pond 3:05
10. Eyes Eyes 2:42
11. The Girl I Love 2:11
12. Uncle Bob's Corner 3:41
13. Rat Face 0:25
14. Trinidad 4:31

Featuring 14 twisted songs produced by “Banana” and Joe Bauer, Hi Fi Snock Uptown saw Hurley amplifying some of Armchair Boogie’s willfully esoteric qualities and delivering an album that explores the full range of his sound, from blues to country and folk to playful sounds – like his crow impressions on ‘Old Black Crow’. As ‘Twilight Zone’ neatly puts it, “everything is weird”. It also features some of his most loved songs such as ‘Water Train’, ‘Eyes, Eyes’ and the gorgeous traveling track ‘Blue Driver’.

Born in 1941 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Hurley moved to New York in the early ‘60s, where he began making his name on the subversive Greenwich Village folk scene before contracting mono and spending years in and out of hospital. Back in health, he was discovered by blues and jazz historian Frederick Ramsey III and subsequently championed by boyhood friend Jesse Colin Young, he recorded his debut album, 1964’s First Songs for Folkways, on the same reel-to-reel machine that taped Lead Belly’s Last Sessions. Its songs were borrowed by Holy Modal Rounders and The Youngbloods, the latter signing Hurley to their Raccoon imprint and releasing his next two albums. The singer-songwriter came into his own recording those warm, eccentric records, colored as they are by fantastic characters, charming Americana and homemade blues.

Recently returning with new material on Devendra Banhart’s and Andy Cabic’s label Gnomonsong, it’s easy to see why Banhart would identify with Hurley – his lineage stretches to any modern performer of skewed blues, country, lo-fi and Americana. No wonder he’s won high praise from younger performers like Lucinda Williams, Vic Chesnutt, Calexico, and Cat Power.