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Artist: Moonshine

Title: Moonshine

Moonshine Homepage

(click on Artist's name above to return to artist's main page)

Moonshine Moonshine Album Cover

 

Category: Southern Rock

Year: 2014

Label: Perris Records

Catalog Number: PER4892

Personnel

Derek Davis vocals
Buzzy James slide guitar
Creg DeFalco guitar
Mike Malone piano, harmonica
Brian Fox drums
Michael Norton bass

Jane Child piano, backing vocals
Michael Anthony backing vocals
Kevin Hill bass
David Lauser drums

Tracks

1.  Mississippi Delta Blues     Listen
2.  Warm Beer Catfish Stew     Listen
3.  The Devils Road     Listen
4.  Fortunate Son     Listen
5.  The Last Song     Listen
6.  Mams Kitchen Brew     Listen
7.  Southern Blood     Listen
8.  Turn Me Around     Listen
9.  Fade Away     Listen
10.  The American Train     Listen

If you see any errors or omissions in the CD information shown above, either in the musician credits or song listings (cover song credits, live tracks, etc.), please post them in the corrections section of the Heavy Harmonies forum/message board.

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EPs and CD-singles from Moonshine are also welcome to be added, as long as they are at least 4 songs in length.




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Existing comments about this CD

From: Doghouse Reilly Date: May 14, 2014 at 19:32
Remember how, back in about 1990, it used to be The Thing for hair-bands to pretend they wre southern-rockers? Everybody from Cinderella and Tesla, on down to to Tattoo Rodeo, Tangier, Graveyard Train, and I could go on for hours, but everybody was twangin' it up and throwin' down southern-style, possibly in an effort to distinguish themselves from the fourth-tier Crue/Poison clones cloting the Sunset Strip. You remember now, right? So that's what this is, Moonshine basically being Babylon A.D. pretending to be Molly Hatchet. As with most of these types of affairs, the songs are good, the production is too polished to sound like anything but hair-mtal, and the whole idea is pretty hokey and contrived ("Southern Blood," a Civil War song from the perspective of a young Confederate?). It's a pleasant listen, but nothing earth-shattering or really even al that memorable. When done wel, this stuff is great, but it's so easy to be forgettable.

From: Doghouse Reilly Date: May 14, 2014 at 20:19
I mean, it goes right along with the utterly generic band name. "Moonshine." Wow.


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