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Letter to Laredo

 
Album Review: Letter to Laredo
 

  • Artist: Joe Ely
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: August 29, 1995
  • Total Time: 54:39
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Country

Review

While Joe Ely had been making good to great albums since his 1977 self-titled debut, 1995's Letter to Laredo was one of the most striking and ambitious projects of his career, and was clearly an effort to raise the creative ante on his earlier work. While Ely's trademark had always been a heady mixture of honky tonk country and roadhouse rock and roll, with Letter to Laredo he aimed to generate the same passion and emotional fire but with a (primarily) acoustic ensemble backing him up, while also striving for a more literate and mature tone than he'd brought to albums like Dig All Night and Musta Notta Gotta Lotta. If the results didn't sound like a typical Joe Ely album, Letter to Laredo isn't as atypical as the surfaces might suggest; the sophisticated storytelling Ely indulges in here is only a step or two removed from his best work up to this point (more a matter of tone and emphasis than a radically different lyrical perspective), and the strength of "All Just To Get To You", "Run Preciosa" and "I'm A Thousand Miles From Home" is in the details of his characters and their lives, not unlike "Honky Tonk Masquerade" and "Because Of The Wind", and "Saint Valentine" shows he hadn't lost his sense of humor or way with a shaggy dog story. Musically, Letter to Laredo is dominated by Teye's acoustic flamenco guitar, which adds a wealth of color and drama to the songs, but drummer Davis McLarty and bassist Glenn Fukunaga put a steady fire behind the musicians, and David Grissom and Lloyd Maines add some superb six-string accents of their; despite the lack of amps, this sounds as full and strong as anything Ely ever cut. And Ely's vocals are splendidly nuanced, with some fine assistance from guests Bruce Springsteen, Raul Malo and Jimmie Dale Gilmore. Joe Ely seemed to been aiming for a masterpiece with Letter to Laredo, and that isn't quite what he got, but he did create a great album that gently altered his audience's expectation of what he could accomplish in the studio, and it's an impressive and moving disc. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
All Just to Get to You Joe Ely, Will Sexton Joe Ely (4:17)
Gallo del Cielo Tom Russell Joe Ely, Raul Malo (7:04)
Run Preciosa Joe Ely Joe Ely (4:54)
Saint Valentine (4:10)
Ranches and Rivers Joe Ely Joe Ely (3:55)
Letter to Laredo Joe Ely Joe Ely (4:40)
I Saw It in You Joe Ely Joe Ely (3:52)
She Finally Spoke Spanish to Me Butch Hancock Joe Ely (3:39)
I Ain't Been Here Long Joe Ely (3:31)
That Ain't Enough Joe Ely Joe Ely (5:39)
I'm a Thousand Miles from Home Joe Ely Joe Ely (6:11)

Credits

Jimmie Dale Gilmore (Harmony Vocals), Joe Ely (Guitar (Acoustic)), Joe Ely (Guitar), Joe Ely (Harmonica), Joe Ely (Vocals), Joe Ely (Producer), Joe Ely (Main Performer), Bruce Springsteen (Vocals), Ponty Bone (Accordion), Little Johnny Fader (Engineer), David Grissom (Guitar (Acoustic)), David Grissom (Guitar (Electric)), David Leonard (Mixing), Lloyd Maines (Dobro), Lloyd Maines (Guitar (Steel)), Lloyd Maines (Slide Guitar), Raul Malo (Harmony Vocals), Raul Malo (Performer), Davis McLarty (Drums), Denny Purcell (Mastering), James Tuttle (Engineer), Glenn Fukunaga (Bass), Chris Searles (Percussion), Joe Nick Patoski (Liner Notes), Beth Middleworth (Art Direction), Beth Middleworth (Design), Buddy Jackson (Art Direction), Michael Wilson (Photography), Sharon Ely (Stylist), El Gato (Harmony Vocals), Teye (Flamenco Guitar), Jim Wilson (Engineer), Guy Floyd (Project Coordinator)
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more