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Now Again | 
| Artist: Flatlanders Label: New West Records Category: Music
List Price: $17.98 Buy New: $14.99 You Save: $2.99 (17%)
Rating: 26 reviews Sales Rank: 68013
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 5 x 0.4
MPN: 6040 UPC: 607396604029 EAN: 0607396604029 ASIN: B000065V9X
Release Date: May 21, 2002 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | Goin' Away | | • | Julia | | • | Wavin' My Heart Goodbye | | • | Down in the Light of the Melon Moon | | • | Right Where I Belong | | • | My Wildest Dreams | | • | I Thought the Wreck Was Over | | • | Yesterday Was Judgment Day | | • | Now It's Now Again | | • | All You Are Love | | • | You Make It Look Easy | | • | Pay the Alligator | | • | Filbert's Rise | | • | South Wind of Summer |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com The Flatlanders--Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, and Butch Hancock--first came together in Lubbock, Texas, in 1971. Along with musical saw player Steve Wesson and mandolinist Tony Pearson, they recorded one of the great "lost" albums of all time, a quirky acoustic-music gem that finally saw the light of day in 1990, when Rounder released the aptly named More a Legend Than a Band. Ely, Gilmore, and Hancock have since gone on to forge distinguished musical careers: Ely as a Texas roots rocker, Gilmore as a mystical country crooner, and Hancock as a celebrated songwriter. Now Again, produced by Ely, marks the group's first album-length collaboration in 30 years. And if it lacks the charm of their first effort--there's nothing here that compares with Gilmore's "Dallas" and "Tonight I'm Gonna Go Downtown"--it still has a certain appeal that comes from putting three old friends together in the studio and rolling some tape. With the exception of Utah Phillips's "Going Away," all the songs were written by Ely, Gilmore, and Hancock, and they sing them in various duo and trio combinations. Some work better than others--standouts include the bouncy rocker "My Wildest Dreams Grow Wilder Every Day" and the country ballad "Down on Filbert's Rise"--but all are worth a listen. --David Hill
Album Description Now Again, by Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Butch Hancockcollectively known as The Flatlandersmarks the first album-length collaboration between the trio of acclaimed Texas songwriters since their debut album three decades ago. Now Again was ostensibly produced by Ely, but the album's tracks were a true collaborative effort. The songs (with the exception of U. Utah Phillips' "Going Away") were co-written by the trio, and most of them feature the rough-hewn vocal blend of all three men ("It was fun to learn we could still sing harmonies," laughs Ely). Besides the session musicians, two other original Flatlanders joined Ely, Gilmore and Hancock for cameos in the studio: musical saw player Steve Wesson and vocalist Tony Pearson. "We said, let's not put any limits on this thing," Ely says. "It freed us up a lot. We had to resist the urge to write a 10-verse song. Every line became important. We had to think about the structure of the songs as a whole. It was a very different kind of writing than what we would do as individuals." But there are touchstones that the music on Now Again shares with the best of Ely's, Gilmore's and Hancock's music: there is an abundance of clever wordplay; there is the freewheeling blend of folk, rock, country, and blues that has always informed their work; and there is the feeling of lazy intimacy, of old friends tossing music and words around like softballs. Songs such as "Waving My Heart Goodbye," "Yesterday Was Judgment Day," "Now It's Now Again," and "Down in the Light of the Melon Moon" can croon, swing, rollick, or cry, depending on the whim of the three tunesmiths. --John T. Davis
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| Customer Reviews: Read 21 more reviews...
These guys are a hoot! Very kicky, different kind of music October 24, 2008 Richard Gibson (Woodland Hills, CA) I live in Los Angeles. In this part of the country, most of us like to look down on the "fly-over country" as boring and unsophisticated. We see ourselves as hip, with it and ever so sophisticated. What a straight-jacket of conformity we impose upon ourselves here! Our mandatory non-conformity compels us all to non-conform in the same way, at all times, upon pain of being un-hip.
Out in the flatlands, I have always felt, you get genuine eccentrics, who really are different. These guys prove my point. I never heard of them before. I just stumbled across their sound in a collection of outlaw country from the 1970s. Their sound is very different. They remind me of the Blasters, but the Blasters freed from their conventional thinking and going wild. They have a musical saw, for crying out loud! These are guys who do not give a damm about how they come across. I think they are fabulous. They have their sound, which is kicky, bouncy and catchy. An uncut bit of American originality blowing in from the prairie to relieve the corporate uniformity of our lives in the big city.
Flatlined, maybe a faint heartbeat September 14, 2008 Robert S. Estes (Santa Rosa, Ca) Legend is that was these three eccentric, poetic, wild-eyed TX boys Jimmy Dale Gilmore, Butch Hancock, Joe Ely made an 8 track released only "Flatlanders". A mid 70's shake up of the old country the new outlaw and the best voices that proudly bridged it all , no one bought it, heck, you can't even find it, rumor has it that it goes for ohhh hundreds of bucks. Or maybe it doesn't exist.. I like the mystery
So do Flatlanders.
This CD brings best friends, collaboraters, in a reunion of a trio that fans of neo-trad country stand up and say hurray!
This CD however may have the fans sit on their hands and merely wink. The songs are not up to the standard of Butch Hancock's lyrical yearnings. Joe Ely sings ruff/tuff like his hit "Musta Notta Gotta Lotta", and as always Jimmy Dale remains the foremost singer of the eager ache of each mistake man takes and makes.
A fine CD for those in the know... and the explorers still digging through flea markets, far flung TX badlands, looking for that 8 track....
This is the Flatlanders CD to get! May 21, 2008 R. Kyle (USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
They're singer-songwriters in their own right and this is the Flatlanders CD where Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, and Butch Hancock's talents are greater than the sum of their parts. There are some CDs you can listen to and just know that the musicians are having a blast making the music--and you're consequently having even more fun listening. Some people liken this CD to one of Americana's best and I wouldn't dispute it.
Is there a standout song? "Right where I belong" is just a happy affirmation. "Wavin' my heart goodbye" is the requisite mourning for lost love. "Pay the Alligator"--no, you just need to listen to that one.
Of course, the best Flatlanders is Flatlanders live--but this is just about as good.
Rebecca Kyle, May 2008
Sit down old friend February 15, 2006 R. D. Snyder (Yellow Springs, Ohio) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm a Boomer - I admit it. And I listen to all kinds of music. Always have. But if ever I need to sit down with old friends, and trade some tunes, this is perfect.
carmelita October 6, 2003 jerry (sacramento, ca United States) 1 out of 22 found this review helpful
The sound quality is poor. If your're looking for Carmelita, the artist is Adam Duritz. Or go to I-10 Chronicles.com.
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