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B4 84
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B4 84
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
B4 84
Current price: $16.99
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has always been a maverick, a Texas-born artist who never worried much about the boundaries between country music and rock & roll. However, even
's open-minded audience was seriously confused by his 1984 album
, in which he livened up his sound with synthesizers and electronic percussion, something that didn't mesh with his image as a champion of traditional Texas music. As it happened,
was inspired to make
after he'd been given an Apple IIe computer not long after they went on the market, and became fascinated with the possibilities of the machine's music production software.
's experiments with the Apple IIe led to him cutting a set of demos that became a dry run for
, and
gives those demos a public hearing for the first time. For those who were put off by the high-tech accents of
,
won't seem like an improvement; the percussion programming is significantly stiffer and more primitive than on
, and the keyboard patches will remind you of any number of bad new wave pop albums of the era. But these demos also sound a good bit more stripped down than the tricked-up
sessions, and in many way that helps; the contrast of the bright electric guitars and the electronics is more effective in this context, and there is a genuine sense of discovery here, as
eagerly tries to fit these new sounds to his rootsy musical approach.
's vocals are great, too, and these sides sound fresher and more lively than how
turned out. There is also a handful of fine songs here, including "What's Shakin' Tonight," "Cool Rockin' Loretta," "Dame Tu Mano," and two solid numbers that didn't make it onto
, "My Baby Thinks She's French" and "You Got the Broken Heart."
often sounded like an experiment that didn't entirely succeed, and that judgment applies to
, too, but these raw shots of high-tech honky tonk give a better picture of why
believed
was an idea worth pursuing, and longtime fans will find this an interesting bit of archaeology. ~ Mark Deming