Showing posts with label Clint Morgan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clint Morgan. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2022

Clint Morgan - Scofflaw

Size: 180.8 MB
Time: 75:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Blues, Rock, Country
Art: Front

01. This Little Light Of Mine (Intro) (0:50)
02. Waco (5:45)
03. Wild One (2:35)
04. I Got A Gun (3:08)
05. I Don't Know Where To Turn (Feat. Diunna Greenleaf) (3:37)
06. Eastham Farm (Feat. Diunna Greenleaf) (7:22)
07. D.B. Cooper Blues (3:23)
08. I Love Robbing Banks (2:48)
09. Bad Man Blues (4:24)
10. Thief In The Night (5:20)
11. Wanted Man (4:24)
12. The Face In The Mirror (5:09)
13. A Sackful Of Cash (3:12)
14. Send Me To The 'Lectric Chair (Feat. Diunna Greenleaf) (5:31)
15. Softly And Tenderly Jesus Is Calling (Feat. Maria Muldaur) (4:21)
16. I Remembered You (5:49)
17. I Done Made It Up In My Mind (Feat. Maria Muldaur) (3:52)
18. This Little Light Of Mine (Outro) (0:40)
19. I Got A Gun (Alternate Take) (Bonus Track) (3:18)

SCOFFLAW is pianist-singer-songwriter Clint Morgan’s sophomore effort, following on from 2008’s You’re Really Bugging Me, and a mightily impressive effort it is, too. It’s an album of pure Americana, with liberal helpings of blues, country, gospel and roots rock, all played with zip and passion. It also almost qualifies as a concept album, with the lyrics to each song combining to tell the story of a fictional person not dissimilar to the outlaw of yore such as John Wesley Hardin, Frank and Jesse James, or Robert “Butch Cassidy” Parker, all of whom were raised in good families but then chose an outlaw path. Morgan divides the narrative action between three distinct time periods – the Old West, the Depression and the modern day – while the songs explore and articulate the internal contradictions of hardened criminals who never entirely lose their Christian faith or the moral compass of their early upbringings, with confusion, remorse and self-doubt to the fore.

Morgan wrote the vast majority of the tracks, however he also included some superb covers, from Maria Muldaur’s modern gospel of “I Done Made It Up In My Mind” (also featuring Muldaur as guest vocalist), to Johnny O’Keefe’s early Australian rock and roll of “Wild One” and Bob Dylan’s “Wanted Man” (most famously covered perhaps by Johnny Cash, whose deep baritone is not dissimilar to Morgan’s own voice). A particular high point is Morgan’s loose, swinging reading of the old Bessie Smith classic “Send Me To The ‘Lectric Chair”.

With superbly sympathetic support from his array of backing musicians, Morgan uses each song both to drive the overall album narrative and to capture an individual moment, such as in the harrowing pain of the Billy The Kid-inspired “I Got A Gun” on which Morgan draws a historically accurate picture of the young Henry McCarty as he sings “I got me a job out of Abilene. A dollar a day and a bowl of beans. Until the foreman called me a scrawny mutt, then he was lying there with a slug in his gut. Now I’m out on the road again, buck-toothed and dirty, short and thin. They laugh and ask me why I never grew, then they learn what a .44 slug can do.”

SCOFFLAW opens and closes (if you don’t count the bonus track of an alternative take of “I’ve Got A Gun) with haunting acapella verses of the traditional “This Little Light Of Mine” sung by the Abingdon, Alabama Children’s Choir, sounding as if they were recorded in the 1930s. In between, highlights abound, from the grinding roots rock of “Waco”, with Kenny Vaughan’s howling electric guitar to the fore, to the rollicking upbeat blues of “I Don’t Know Where To Turn” (featuring some joyful singing from Dianna Greenleaf), the bouncing countryish “D.B. Cooper Blues” (with its knowing nod to Jimmie Rodgers’ “California Blues”) and the traditional rock’n’roll of “I Love Robbing Banks”.

In SCOFFLAW, Clint Morgan has produced an outstanding album of modern Americana with its tales of loss and redemption. Let’s hope it doesn’t take eight years for his next release. Recommended.

Scofflaw MP3
Scofflaw FLAC

Monday, August 2, 2021

Clint Morgan - Troublemaker

Size: 145.1 MB
Time: 61:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2021
Styles: Blues, Rock, Americana
Art: Front

01. Hangman Woman (4:08)
02. Go Down, Moses (3:24)
03. Ain't That The Blues (4:02)
04. Big River (4:34)
05. Hungry Man Blues (4:25)
06. Echoes (4:47)
07. I'll Love You If I Want To (4:16)
08. It's Rough Out Here (4:49)
09. She Take My Money (3:05)
10. Too Rich To Sing The Blues (3:37)
11. Hurricane Harvey (4:32)
12. Somebody Put A Walmart On The Farm (4:59)
13. The Cover Of The Living Blues (3:49)
14. The Troublemaker (3:28)
15. The Cover Of The Living Blues (Watermelon Slim Version) (3:49)

Based in Olympia, Washington, singer-pianist Clint Morgan comfortably inhabits the historically linked but often segregated worlds of blues, country and rock and roll. It’s all there in his third album of original songs, the often-humorous Troublemaker. An impressive gang of special guests—Kinky Friedman, the McCrary Sisters, Bob Margolin, Bob Corritore, Watermelon Slim and Jonn Del Toro Richardson—are well-cast in their respective songs and illustrative of Morgan’s versatility.

Blues and country blend smoothly in Troublemaker’s opening song, “Hangman Woman.” If Johnny Cash and Howlin’ Wolf had ever sat beside each other for some mutual music making, the results might have sounded like this. Taking a deeper dive into blues, “Ain’t That the Blues” features a juke-joint swaying groove and Corritore’s harmonica.

Morgan’s take on Cash’s classic torch-song travelogue, “Big River,” confirms his affection for the Man in Black. While Morgan’s voice doesn’t resonate with Cash’s bass-baritone authority, his general tone and unfancy delivery do echo Cash. Morgan turns to another mid-20th star with “She Take My Money,” s song closely modeled on Chuck Berry’s 1950s rock and roll hits.

The album’s non-original songs include one of its highlights, a rich performance and arrangement of the spiritual “Go Down Moses,” costarring the McCrary Sisters. Another special guest, Kinky Friedman, wryly recites verses in the novelty song “Somebody Put a Walmart on the Farm.”

Morgan loads Troublemaker with 14 songs and one bonus track. Because the project contains some underachieving selections, better to have cut its track list down to 12 or even 10 songs. At his idiosyncratic best, Morgan earns his entertainer stripes. ~John Wirt

Troublemaker MP3
Troublemaker FLAC

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Clint Morgan & The Lost Cause - You're Really Bugging Me Now

Size: 105,1 MB
Time: 45:09
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008/2014
Styles: Gospel, Piano Blues, Modern Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. End Of The Line (3:55)
02. Rebelland (3:35)
03. Morgan's Boogie (5:07)
04. Boo Hoo (3:29)
05. The Face In The Mirror (4:40)
06. Garbage Man (2:54)
07. Just A Closer Walk With Thee (5:15)
08. Somebody Put A Walmart On The Farm (4:30)
09. You Bug Me (4:08)
10. The Wonder Of You (4:17)
11. I Shall Not Be Moved (3:13)

RadioIndy is proud to present Clint Morgan a GrIndie Award for their CD "You're Really Bugging Me Now." A GrIndie Award is RadioIndy's stamp of approval that this CD is an excellent quality CD. Please join us in congratulating this artist on this accomplishment.

“You're Really Bugging Me Now” is an excellent piano blues/country gospel album from Clint Morgan, a talented musician with a great sense of humor. The entire album breathes Morgan's personality by combining secular and non-secular songs, Morgan's takes on gospel classics, and intelligently humorous songs about women and Wal-Mart. The arrangements center around Morgan's intricate piano work true to the blues, early rock & roll, and boogie woogie genres, though they also feature nice beats and some great blues guitar work. Morgan's vocals on the country gospel tracks are reminsicent to the crooning bass vocals of Johnny Cash, while the blues tracks sound like a fusion between Cash and Stevie Ray Vaughn. “You\'re Really Bugging Me Now” is well-produced, and it sounds polished and ready for extended play. “The Wonder of You” is a blues rock track with a great arrangement featuring organ, piano, guitar solos and some great, humorous lyrics about married life. “Garbage Man” immediately follows the standard gospel track “Just A Closer Walk With Thee” and features hilarious lyrics about Morgan's wife running around with the garbage man and the milk man and has an excellent piano solo. “You're Really Bugging Me Now” is a great album from an extremely interesting personality and should be picked up by any piano blues fan. ~Chris & the RadioIndy.com Review Team

You're Really Bugging Me Now