Hayseed Dixie -《A Hot Piece of Grass》[MP3]
专辑英文名: A Hot Piece of Grass
歌手: Hayseed Dixie
音乐风格: 摇滚
资源格式: MP3
发行时间: 2005年
地区: 美国
语言: 英语
简介:

唱片公司:Cooking Vinyl
专辑风格:Contemporary Bluegrass;Country Comedy;Comedy Rock
压缩比率:192kbps
专辑介绍:
自2001年以推出向AC/DC致敬的翻唱辑出道的Hayseed Dixie,曾经想用AC/Dixie做为乐团名,在闯荡乐坛进入第九个年头时,一共发行了六张翻唱专辑;一张原创专辑。他们用木吉他,大贝司,提琴,Banjo向AC/DC致敬,他们还钟爱Motorhead、Kiss、Black Sabbath、Mc5、Neil young……Hayseed Dixie以团体拿手的乡村蓝调乐风翻玩经典,唱出轻鬆写意的自在风格,畅快原始的草根气息,赋予歌曲全新面貌。
Hayseed Dixie know how to have a good time, even when they attempt to bring you some of the heaviest and most renowned hard rock and metal tunes of all time with a huge dose of Appalachian mountain arrangements. The album opens with the bizarre but effective cover of Led Zeppelin's "Black Dog," with the electric guitar of Jimmy Page usurped by some nifty banjo, guitar, and mandolin playing. The kitsch factor is quite obvious with this album, but Hayseed Dixie manage to adopt these songs as their own. And while they often stay true to the original arrangements, their cover of Black Sabbath's "War Pigs" has that definitive toe-tapping bluegrass vibe running through it despite the dramatic flourishes at times. Deacon Dale Reno's meticulous manic mandolin-playing shines during the bridge. Meanwhile, "Holiday" by Green Day is a swinging, Celtic-tinged ditty with rootsy elements. A rowdy, no-nonsense hoedown occurs with the frantic "Ace of Spades," which has nearly as much energy as the version by Motörhead. A couple of efforts are quite cheesy, though, particularly "Whole Lotta Love," which ambles along as Barley Scotch even dishes out some wailing à la Robert Plant. "I'm going to give you every inch of my love, every centimeter in the U.K.," Scotch sings. Hayseed Dixie manage to make the most of AC/DC's "Whole Lotta Rosie," which has a definite boogie feel. The second half of the album tosses the covers aside for original material, starting with a gorgeous but hellacious-paced "Blind Beggar Breakdown" that could give you carpal tunnel syndrome just listening to it. Generally though, none of the remaining songs are outstanding, with "Mountain Man" a run-of-the-mill slice of bluegrass and country. When they opt for a lighter approach as in "Marijuana," it sounds like the song was crossed with the instrumental "Tequila," and it falls flat. The only memorable effort is "Corn Liquor," which has them resembling a well-oiled hoedown machine — that and the almost obligatory "Dueling Banjos."