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Live From Austin, TX in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $38.99

Live From Austin, TX in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $38.99
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John Hiatt
was touring behind his self-described "midlife crisis album," 1993's
Perfectly Good Guitar
-- on which he teamed up with a raucous (and noticeably younger)
rock & roll
band for backup -- when he appeared on
PBS
' venerable music series
Austin City Limits
to tape a set with his young guns in tow.
Live from Austin, TX
documents the full 74-minute show
Hiatt
and his band played that night, with
and
School of Fish
guitarist
Michael Ward
giving the tunes plenty of six-string firepower, and drummer
Michael Urbano
and bassist
Davey Faragher
holding down the backbeat with lots of muscle. While
the vocalist has always been something of an acquired taste, here he gives the songs as much
blues
-charged bellow as he can offer, and the truth of the matter is he sounds like he's having a great time. He also seems willing to stretch out the songs as far as they want to go, and one might argue that
"Your Dad Did,"
"Something Wild,"
"Thing Called Love"
didn't need to be stretched out to six minutes and change each. But
the songwriter has always commanded attention as one of the best tunesmiths America has to offer, and here he delivers 14 good to exceptional songs with plenty of heart, soul, and sweat. If this disc is pretty atypical for
these days (not to mention that this tour was already documented on the album
Hiatt Comes Alive at Budokan?
), it's still good fun for fans and proves the man knows how to rock out when he's of a mind. ~ Mark Deming
was touring behind his self-described "midlife crisis album," 1993's
Perfectly Good Guitar
-- on which he teamed up with a raucous (and noticeably younger)
rock & roll
band for backup -- when he appeared on
PBS
' venerable music series
Austin City Limits
to tape a set with his young guns in tow.
Live from Austin, TX
documents the full 74-minute show
Hiatt
and his band played that night, with
and
School of Fish
guitarist
Michael Ward
giving the tunes plenty of six-string firepower, and drummer
Michael Urbano
and bassist
Davey Faragher
holding down the backbeat with lots of muscle. While
the vocalist has always been something of an acquired taste, here he gives the songs as much
blues
-charged bellow as he can offer, and the truth of the matter is he sounds like he's having a great time. He also seems willing to stretch out the songs as far as they want to go, and one might argue that
"Your Dad Did,"
"Something Wild,"
"Thing Called Love"
didn't need to be stretched out to six minutes and change each. But
the songwriter has always commanded attention as one of the best tunesmiths America has to offer, and here he delivers 14 good to exceptional songs with plenty of heart, soul, and sweat. If this disc is pretty atypical for
these days (not to mention that this tour was already documented on the album
Hiatt Comes Alive at Budokan?
), it's still good fun for fans and proves the man knows how to rock out when he's of a mind. ~ Mark Deming
John Hiatt
was touring behind his self-described "midlife crisis album," 1993's
Perfectly Good Guitar
-- on which he teamed up with a raucous (and noticeably younger)
rock & roll
band for backup -- when he appeared on
PBS
' venerable music series
Austin City Limits
to tape a set with his young guns in tow.
Live from Austin, TX
documents the full 74-minute show
Hiatt
and his band played that night, with
and
School of Fish
guitarist
Michael Ward
giving the tunes plenty of six-string firepower, and drummer
Michael Urbano
and bassist
Davey Faragher
holding down the backbeat with lots of muscle. While
the vocalist has always been something of an acquired taste, here he gives the songs as much
blues
-charged bellow as he can offer, and the truth of the matter is he sounds like he's having a great time. He also seems willing to stretch out the songs as far as they want to go, and one might argue that
"Your Dad Did,"
"Something Wild,"
"Thing Called Love"
didn't need to be stretched out to six minutes and change each. But
the songwriter has always commanded attention as one of the best tunesmiths America has to offer, and here he delivers 14 good to exceptional songs with plenty of heart, soul, and sweat. If this disc is pretty atypical for
these days (not to mention that this tour was already documented on the album
Hiatt Comes Alive at Budokan?
), it's still good fun for fans and proves the man knows how to rock out when he's of a mind. ~ Mark Deming
was touring behind his self-described "midlife crisis album," 1993's
Perfectly Good Guitar
-- on which he teamed up with a raucous (and noticeably younger)
rock & roll
band for backup -- when he appeared on
PBS
' venerable music series
Austin City Limits
to tape a set with his young guns in tow.
Live from Austin, TX
documents the full 74-minute show
Hiatt
and his band played that night, with
and
School of Fish
guitarist
Michael Ward
giving the tunes plenty of six-string firepower, and drummer
Michael Urbano
and bassist
Davey Faragher
holding down the backbeat with lots of muscle. While
the vocalist has always been something of an acquired taste, here he gives the songs as much
blues
-charged bellow as he can offer, and the truth of the matter is he sounds like he's having a great time. He also seems willing to stretch out the songs as far as they want to go, and one might argue that
"Your Dad Did,"
"Something Wild,"
"Thing Called Love"
didn't need to be stretched out to six minutes and change each. But
the songwriter has always commanded attention as one of the best tunesmiths America has to offer, and here he delivers 14 good to exceptional songs with plenty of heart, soul, and sweat. If this disc is pretty atypical for
these days (not to mention that this tour was already documented on the album
Hiatt Comes Alive at Budokan?
), it's still good fun for fans and proves the man knows how to rock out when he's of a mind. ~ Mark Deming

















