Bitrate: 320K/s
Year: 1999
Time: 57:06
Size: 136,2 MB
Label: Frog Pad Records
Styles: Progressive bluegrass/Jam Band
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Half Moon Rising - 4:33
2. Mental Breakdown - 2:59
3. The Bolton Stretch - 2:47
4. Left Me In A Hole - 5:27
5. Darkness And Light - 5:25
6. On The Run - 3:51
7. Eight Cylinders - 3:55
8. 40 Miles From Denver - 3:48
9. This Lonesome Heart - 2:08
10. At The End Of The Day - 3:40
11. Mossy Cow - 2:49
12. High On A Hilltop - 2:44
13. To Say Goodbye, To Be Forgiven - 3:43
14. If There's Still Ramblin' In The Rambler (Let Him Go) - 2:48
15. Waijal Breakdown - 6:22
Musicians:
Dave Johnston – banjo, vocals
Jeff Austin – mandolin, vocals
Ben Kaufmann – bass, vocals
Adam Aijala – guitar, vocals, banjo on track 15
Other musicians:
Darol Anger – fiddle on tracks 11 & 15
Celeste Krenz – additional vocals on track 7
Mike Marshall – mandolin on track 15
Sally Van Meter – electric lap slide on track 7, additional vocals on track 7, resophonic guitar on track 8
This Nederland, CO, band's brand of string band music is as steeped in the jam band tradition as it is in the high and lonesome bluegrass sounds originated by Bill Monroe. Though this isn't the first band to blend these influences, driving rhythms and exceptional picking make for an enjoyable debut, if not one without definite weaknesses. The band's vocals and songwriting talents (all four members sing and write) simply don't equal its instrumental abilities. Banjo player Dave Johnston's keening tenor sounds most believable floating above the band's rustic groove on "The Lonesome Heart" and the jukebox-ready alt-country weeper "Eight Cylinders." Jeff Austin is fast-fingered on the mandolin but sings too near the top of his limited vocal range. The Yonder Mountain String Band's chops put many of the album's weaker songs over anyway, suggesting that the band's live shows will make them wildly popular on the jam band and bluegrass festival circuits, where songwriting and singing are very often secondary to instrumental flash. Progressive bluegrassers Mike Marshall and Darol Anger make guest appearances.
Elevation
Year: 1999
Time: 57:06
Size: 136,2 MB
Label: Frog Pad Records
Styles: Progressive bluegrass/Jam Band
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Half Moon Rising - 4:33
2. Mental Breakdown - 2:59
3. The Bolton Stretch - 2:47
4. Left Me In A Hole - 5:27
5. Darkness And Light - 5:25
6. On The Run - 3:51
7. Eight Cylinders - 3:55
8. 40 Miles From Denver - 3:48
9. This Lonesome Heart - 2:08
10. At The End Of The Day - 3:40
11. Mossy Cow - 2:49
12. High On A Hilltop - 2:44
13. To Say Goodbye, To Be Forgiven - 3:43
14. If There's Still Ramblin' In The Rambler (Let Him Go) - 2:48
15. Waijal Breakdown - 6:22
Musicians:
Dave Johnston – banjo, vocals
Jeff Austin – mandolin, vocals
Ben Kaufmann – bass, vocals
Adam Aijala – guitar, vocals, banjo on track 15
Other musicians:
Darol Anger – fiddle on tracks 11 & 15
Celeste Krenz – additional vocals on track 7
Mike Marshall – mandolin on track 15
Sally Van Meter – electric lap slide on track 7, additional vocals on track 7, resophonic guitar on track 8
This Nederland, CO, band's brand of string band music is as steeped in the jam band tradition as it is in the high and lonesome bluegrass sounds originated by Bill Monroe. Though this isn't the first band to blend these influences, driving rhythms and exceptional picking make for an enjoyable debut, if not one without definite weaknesses. The band's vocals and songwriting talents (all four members sing and write) simply don't equal its instrumental abilities. Banjo player Dave Johnston's keening tenor sounds most believable floating above the band's rustic groove on "The Lonesome Heart" and the jukebox-ready alt-country weeper "Eight Cylinders." Jeff Austin is fast-fingered on the mandolin but sings too near the top of his limited vocal range. The Yonder Mountain String Band's chops put many of the album's weaker songs over anyway, suggesting that the band's live shows will make them wildly popular on the jam band and bluegrass festival circuits, where songwriting and singing are very often secondary to instrumental flash. Progressive bluegrassers Mike Marshall and Darol Anger make guest appearances.
Elevation
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