2007-07-12
Respect for one’s elders seems to be a universally accepted code of conduct. A code that Tim Armstrong (Rancid, The Transplants,etc.) seems to know quite well, in fact. Channelling the reggae/dub dabblings of Sandinista-era Clash, Armstrong offers what appears, on the surface, to be a reletively light hearted romp through his world, with a persistent oh-so-unmistakable reggae backbeat persisting. However, for those who catch the lyrics, the light-heartedness is often scant, as Mr. Armstrong seems to favor projecting a more realist view of our world’s current rat’s nest of a social situation. Musically and lyrically, respect for his elders.
Gomez
A New Time
Gabriel Wolfchild And The Northern Light
Mornings Like These EP
Mary Karlzen
The Wanderlust Diaries
BRUCE HORNSBY AND THE NOISEMAKERS
LEVITATE
k.d. lang
Hymns of the 49th Parallel
NUTTIN BUT STRINGZ
Struggle From the Subway to the Charts
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