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Junky Star

Junky Star
Artist: Ryan Bingham
Label: Lost Highway
Category: Music

List Price: $10.00
Buy New: $7.28 (On sale from $7.32)
as of 2/8/2012 00:55 CST details
You Save: $0.04 (1%)



New (23) Used (6) from $7.28

Sales Rank: 4962

Language: English (Unknown)
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1
Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.9 x 0.4

UPC: 602527440996
EAN: 0602527440996
ASIN: B003QTDEQ4

Release Date: August 31, 2010
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • The Poet
  • The Wandering
  • Strange Feelin' In The Air
  • Junky Star
  • Depression
  • Hallelujah
  • Yesterday's Blues
  • Direction Of The Wind
  • Lay My Head On The Rail
  • Hard Worn Trail
  • Self-Righteous Wall
  • All Choked Up Again

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
For some artists, winning an Oscar would represent reaching a pinnacle. For Ryan Bingham, who took home the Academy Award for "The Weary Kind," his hauntingly beautiful theme song for the acclaimed film Crazy Heart, it instead represented a crossroads and a decision about which path to take.

"When there are a lot of people around saying 'look, you have to capitalize on this and do something really commercial,' you might think about it for a second," admits the LA-based singer-songwriter. "But at the end of the day, there's not a chance in hell I could do that. It made me sick to my stomach just thinking about it. I couldn't get up in front of people and play a bunch of stuff that didn't mean anything to me."

Bingham puts that philosophy to the test in a big way on Junky Star, his third album on Lost Highway, which was recorded in a matter of days with producer T Bone Burnett, his collaborator on the Crazy Heart soundtrack. The disc delivers a bracing fusion of pensive, gravelly ballads - like "Hallelujah," which is not a Leonard Cohen cover, but his own take on mortality, delivered from the other side of the veil - and raw, rock'n'roll cuts that showcase Bingham's incisive, darkly compelling lyrical bent.

Bingham channels a number of unique spirits over the course of the album, leading with his sensitive side on "The Poet" and kicking out the jams on the Waylon-meets-Keith Richards "All Choked Up Again." Elsewhere, as in songs like "Depression" - a vivid evocation of our current social climate that'd have Woody Guthrie nodding in approval - and the album's poignant title track, Bingham applies his wizened rasp with precise strokes, wringing emotion from every note.