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Texas Sun

Texas Sun in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $10.49
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Texas Sun

Texas Sun in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $10.49
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Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
The formulation of this short romantic detour from
Leon Bridges
and
Khruangbin
began, appropriately enough, on the road. After the fellow native Texans toured together,
-- a trio of instrumentalists who mix deep soul, funk, and rock with grainy, psychedelic finesse -- recorded a track they thought would suit
Bridges
, an old soul with a fresh and personal perspective on traditional R&B. They met up in Houston and knocked out four songs with
always at the fore, a change for the band who have previously used vocals only for shading. They begin by unfurling a couple lazing grooves. The singer shifts from a getaway proposition on "Texas," twanged out more than anything on the two proper
LPs, to an idyllic reminiscence on "Midnight," where the band enhance the mood with a sensitive touch. On "C-Side,"
Laura Lee
switches it up with a bassline that bounces not unlike the one
Nathan East
played to propel
Dennis Edwards
' "Don't Look Any Further," with
set aloft by his "melanin lady." "Conversion," a redemptive ballad, slows it down as
sings of newfound clarity, but the effect of his well-matched partners' work is only a little less intoxicating than it is on the preceding numbers. ~ Andy Kellman
The formulation of this short romantic detour from
Leon Bridges
and
Khruangbin
began, appropriately enough, on the road. After the fellow native Texans toured together,
-- a trio of instrumentalists who mix deep soul, funk, and rock with grainy, psychedelic finesse -- recorded a track they thought would suit
Bridges
, an old soul with a fresh and personal perspective on traditional R&B. They met up in Houston and knocked out four songs with
always at the fore, a change for the band who have previously used vocals only for shading. They begin by unfurling a couple lazing grooves. The singer shifts from a getaway proposition on "Texas," twanged out more than anything on the two proper
LPs, to an idyllic reminiscence on "Midnight," where the band enhance the mood with a sensitive touch. On "C-Side,"
Laura Lee
switches it up with a bassline that bounces not unlike the one
Nathan East
played to propel
Dennis Edwards
' "Don't Look Any Further," with
set aloft by his "melanin lady." "Conversion," a redemptive ballad, slows it down as
sings of newfound clarity, but the effect of his well-matched partners' work is only a little less intoxicating than it is on the preceding numbers. ~ Andy Kellman

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