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Bio
All Music Guide
Press Releases:
June 7, 2006
May 1, 2006
Press:
July-Aug 2006
June 10, 2006
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TEN CITY RUN
ALL MUSIC
GUIDE
Texas residents Ten
City Run come out of the gates roarin' on their Somethin' Else (named for the classic
Eddie Cochran tune), their Universal South debut. Fronted by songwriter, vocalist, and bassist Hans Frank (nope, he's not European; he's from Upper Appalachia in mountain country)
and featuring Texan über-guitarist Casper Rawls and drummer Luckey McClain (both are native Texans). Frank is fine songwriter, he takes his honky tonk and his rock
& roll seriously and melds them close to perfectly on the first
single, the raucous "City of Angels (Dumb Ol' Country Boy)" -- they should drop that parenthetical statement form the
title -- the fine, midtempo, broken love song "Memories,"
the wooly two-stepper "We're in It,"
which may have been a hit for Buck
Owens in the mid-'60s, the scorching country rocker "Mama Died,"
and the swinging honky tonk weeper, "Congratulations,"
that Dwight Yoakam should consider cutting. The bottom line is that Ten
City Run embody all that is right about Texas music. They have the
spirit to be sure, but they also have the chops, and their
choice of covers on this 12-song set is impeccable. Ten City Run covers not only Cochran,
but they also do a fine read of Warren Zevon's classic "Carmelita"
(complete with weeping accordion). Doug
Sahm's "Juan Mendoza"
is done faithfully; though nobody here can sing it like that
late Texas groover. Taking songs from the revered Texas swing era can be risky, but the voodoo blues read of Tommy Duncan's "Stay All Night,"
reinvents the tune. Of more modern fare, there's Will
Kimbrough and Gwil
Owen's "Goodnight Moon,"
with a nice twist using a Fender Rhodes in the intro and
backdrop and their signature tune, and the late Emily Graham's
(from Buffalo Nickel) "El
Camino."
While there is nothing terribly new here, there doesn't need
to be. Somethin' Else is a solid, promising debut by a band that may be as much
fun on disc as they are live. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
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