[ Curb / MCA Records / 2 CD ]
Release Date: Tuesday 22 September 1998
The most mercurial of Texas singer/songwriters, Lyle Lovett has assembled a two-disc homage to mentors and fellow travelers--a homecoming of mixed emotions and uneven meditations on Texas land and soul. The first disc is the most spacious--including songs by Vince Bell, Guy Clark, Robert Earl Keen, and Michael Martin Murphy--while the second concentrates on Walter Hyatt and Townes Van Zandt (who died in 1996 and 1997 respectively). The meticulous and mostly acoustic layering of dobro, steel guitar, and piano sonically celebrates Lovett's Lone Star roots; his band even jaunts into western swing on Walter Hyatt's "Teach Me About Love." And Lovett's voice sounds warmly weathered with the respect and affection he has for the material. But the material is perplexing. Eric Taylor's "Memphis Midnight/Memphis Morning" never drives home its lonely impressions; selections from David Rodriguez and Willis Allen Ramsey never draw from the depth of those writers' imaginations (at least "Sleepwalking" is a rarity in Ramsey's small but legendary catalogue); and Steve Fromholz's "Texas Trilogy" never transcends aimless local color. But the two traditional pieces, "More Pretty Girls Than One" and "Texas River Song," number among the album's finest surprises.
1-1. Bears
1-2. Lungs
1-3. Step Inside This House
1-4. Memphis Midnight / Memphis Morning
1-5. I've Had Enough
1-6. Teach Me About Love
1-7. Sleepwalking
1-8. Ballad Of The Snow Leopard And The Tanqueray Cowboy
1-9. More Pretty Girls Than One
1-10. West Texas Highway
1-11. Rollin' By
2-1. Texas Trilogy: Daybreak
2-2. Texas Trilogy: Train Ride
2-3. Texas Trilogy: Bosque County Romance
2-4. Flyin' Shoes
2-5. Babes In The Woods
2-6. Highway Kind
2-7. Lonely In Love
2-8. If I Needed You
2-9. I'll Come Knockin'
2-10 . Texas River Song