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Live Dinner Reunion
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Live Dinner Reunion in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $17.99

Live Dinner Reunion in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD
In 1996,
Robert Earl Keen
was a Texas singer/songwriter with a healthy fan following when he played a gig at John T. Floore's Country Store, a celebrated restaurant and concert venue in Helotes, Texas, just northwest of San Antonio.
Keen
recorded the show, and the subsequent album,
No. 2 Live Dinner
, became a de facto greatest-hits album and an enduring favorite both in and outside the Lone Star State. Twenty years later, as
was celebrating its china anniversary,
returned to Floore's Country Store to record a sequel. By this time,
had become an enduring figure in the Texas music community, and 2016's
Live Dinner Reunion
finds him playing before an audibly larger and more enthusiastic crowd than he had two decades previously. The second time around,
brought along a few friends and fellow Lone Star icons as guests, including
Lyle Lovett
,
Joe Ely
Bruce Robison
, and
Cody Canada
. Where
was an enjoyable summing up of the first dozen years of
's recording career,
is a celebration of his place in the pantheon of Texas music, a spot where he has a sizable and sometimes rowdy fan base.
knows he's a small fish compared to
Willie Nelson
, but he's also a hero to a generation of younger tunesmiths and music fans. All in all, that's not a bad place to be, and if
and his current band are tighter and a bit more professional than they were in 1996,
performs with a similar degree of enthusiasm, and his interaction with the audience is breezy and appreciative. This album devotes more space to past glories than recent
REK
copyrights, but he still sings and plays them like he enjoys them, and the guest spots -- especially
Lovett
on "This Old Porch" and
Ely
on "The Road Goes on Forever" -- lend a fresher perspective to the old chestnuts. If a sequel to a 20-year-old live album doesn't sound like a good idea at first glance,
comes surprisingly close to capturing the same magic as the original, and it confirms
is still at the top of his game as a singer and showman. ~ Mark Deming
Robert Earl Keen
was a Texas singer/songwriter with a healthy fan following when he played a gig at John T. Floore's Country Store, a celebrated restaurant and concert venue in Helotes, Texas, just northwest of San Antonio.
Keen
recorded the show, and the subsequent album,
No. 2 Live Dinner
, became a de facto greatest-hits album and an enduring favorite both in and outside the Lone Star State. Twenty years later, as
was celebrating its china anniversary,
returned to Floore's Country Store to record a sequel. By this time,
had become an enduring figure in the Texas music community, and 2016's
Live Dinner Reunion
finds him playing before an audibly larger and more enthusiastic crowd than he had two decades previously. The second time around,
brought along a few friends and fellow Lone Star icons as guests, including
Lyle Lovett
,
Joe Ely
Bruce Robison
, and
Cody Canada
. Where
was an enjoyable summing up of the first dozen years of
's recording career,
is a celebration of his place in the pantheon of Texas music, a spot where he has a sizable and sometimes rowdy fan base.
knows he's a small fish compared to
Willie Nelson
, but he's also a hero to a generation of younger tunesmiths and music fans. All in all, that's not a bad place to be, and if
and his current band are tighter and a bit more professional than they were in 1996,
performs with a similar degree of enthusiasm, and his interaction with the audience is breezy and appreciative. This album devotes more space to past glories than recent
REK
copyrights, but he still sings and plays them like he enjoys them, and the guest spots -- especially
Lovett
on "This Old Porch" and
Ely
on "The Road Goes on Forever" -- lend a fresher perspective to the old chestnuts. If a sequel to a 20-year-old live album doesn't sound like a good idea at first glance,
comes surprisingly close to capturing the same magic as the original, and it confirms
is still at the top of his game as a singer and showman. ~ Mark Deming
In 1996,
Robert Earl Keen
was a Texas singer/songwriter with a healthy fan following when he played a gig at John T. Floore's Country Store, a celebrated restaurant and concert venue in Helotes, Texas, just northwest of San Antonio.
Keen
recorded the show, and the subsequent album,
No. 2 Live Dinner
, became a de facto greatest-hits album and an enduring favorite both in and outside the Lone Star State. Twenty years later, as
was celebrating its china anniversary,
returned to Floore's Country Store to record a sequel. By this time,
had become an enduring figure in the Texas music community, and 2016's
Live Dinner Reunion
finds him playing before an audibly larger and more enthusiastic crowd than he had two decades previously. The second time around,
brought along a few friends and fellow Lone Star icons as guests, including
Lyle Lovett
,
Joe Ely
Bruce Robison
, and
Cody Canada
. Where
was an enjoyable summing up of the first dozen years of
's recording career,
is a celebration of his place in the pantheon of Texas music, a spot where he has a sizable and sometimes rowdy fan base.
knows he's a small fish compared to
Willie Nelson
, but he's also a hero to a generation of younger tunesmiths and music fans. All in all, that's not a bad place to be, and if
and his current band are tighter and a bit more professional than they were in 1996,
performs with a similar degree of enthusiasm, and his interaction with the audience is breezy and appreciative. This album devotes more space to past glories than recent
REK
copyrights, but he still sings and plays them like he enjoys them, and the guest spots -- especially
Lovett
on "This Old Porch" and
Ely
on "The Road Goes on Forever" -- lend a fresher perspective to the old chestnuts. If a sequel to a 20-year-old live album doesn't sound like a good idea at first glance,
comes surprisingly close to capturing the same magic as the original, and it confirms
is still at the top of his game as a singer and showman. ~ Mark Deming
Robert Earl Keen
was a Texas singer/songwriter with a healthy fan following when he played a gig at John T. Floore's Country Store, a celebrated restaurant and concert venue in Helotes, Texas, just northwest of San Antonio.
Keen
recorded the show, and the subsequent album,
No. 2 Live Dinner
, became a de facto greatest-hits album and an enduring favorite both in and outside the Lone Star State. Twenty years later, as
was celebrating its china anniversary,
returned to Floore's Country Store to record a sequel. By this time,
had become an enduring figure in the Texas music community, and 2016's
Live Dinner Reunion
finds him playing before an audibly larger and more enthusiastic crowd than he had two decades previously. The second time around,
brought along a few friends and fellow Lone Star icons as guests, including
Lyle Lovett
,
Joe Ely
Bruce Robison
, and
Cody Canada
. Where
was an enjoyable summing up of the first dozen years of
's recording career,
is a celebration of his place in the pantheon of Texas music, a spot where he has a sizable and sometimes rowdy fan base.
knows he's a small fish compared to
Willie Nelson
, but he's also a hero to a generation of younger tunesmiths and music fans. All in all, that's not a bad place to be, and if
and his current band are tighter and a bit more professional than they were in 1996,
performs with a similar degree of enthusiasm, and his interaction with the audience is breezy and appreciative. This album devotes more space to past glories than recent
REK
copyrights, but he still sings and plays them like he enjoys them, and the guest spots -- especially
Lovett
on "This Old Porch" and
Ely
on "The Road Goes on Forever" -- lend a fresher perspective to the old chestnuts. If a sequel to a 20-year-old live album doesn't sound like a good idea at first glance,
comes surprisingly close to capturing the same magic as the original, and it confirms
is still at the top of his game as a singer and showman. ~ Mark Deming

















