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Beneath This Gruff Exterior
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Beneath This Gruff Exterior
Current price: $28.99
Barnes and Noble
Beneath This Gruff Exterior
Current price: $28.99
Size: OS
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While
Beneath This Gruff Exterior
is credited to
John Hiatt & the Goners
, a more appropriate designation might be "
John Hiatt
and
Sonny Landreth
" -- hotshot guitarist
Landreth
, who has held down a longtime on-and-off tenure in
Hiatt
's road band, spreads his licks over every nook and cranny of this album, so much so that his guitar spends about as much time in the spotlight as
Mr. Hiatt
himself. With the guitars turned up and
willing to push the growl of his voice to the limit,
finds
in stripped-down and rockin' form, much more so than on the albums which immediately preceded it. The production (by
Don Smith
with
and the band) is simple and straightforward, sounding loose and live, with
willing to let a few minor vocal glitches slip into the final mix. In short, this is a
rock & roll
album, which means his more serious songs are put on hold and stuff like
"How Bad's the Coffee"
"Almost Fed Up With the Blues"
find their way onto disc. But as has long been the case,
's lighter stuff still packs more emotional heft than most songwriters you could mention (especially on
"Missing Pieces"
"The Most Unoriginal Sin"
), and if his voice sounds as if it's starting to fray a tiny bit, he can still belt it out pretty convincingly for a guy who's been making records since 1974. The vast majority of
's albums fall into one of two categories -- brilliant and real good.
falls into the latter file, which means it isn't a revelation like
Two Bit Monsters
or
Bring the Family
, but it's got good songs sang by a great songwriter, and played by a rockin' little band with a real fine guitarist up front, and if that's not what you're looking for, you're probably not much on
anyway. ~ Mark Deming
Beneath This Gruff Exterior
is credited to
John Hiatt & the Goners
, a more appropriate designation might be "
John Hiatt
and
Sonny Landreth
" -- hotshot guitarist
Landreth
, who has held down a longtime on-and-off tenure in
Hiatt
's road band, spreads his licks over every nook and cranny of this album, so much so that his guitar spends about as much time in the spotlight as
Mr. Hiatt
himself. With the guitars turned up and
willing to push the growl of his voice to the limit,
finds
in stripped-down and rockin' form, much more so than on the albums which immediately preceded it. The production (by
Don Smith
with
and the band) is simple and straightforward, sounding loose and live, with
willing to let a few minor vocal glitches slip into the final mix. In short, this is a
rock & roll
album, which means his more serious songs are put on hold and stuff like
"How Bad's the Coffee"
"Almost Fed Up With the Blues"
find their way onto disc. But as has long been the case,
's lighter stuff still packs more emotional heft than most songwriters you could mention (especially on
"Missing Pieces"
"The Most Unoriginal Sin"
), and if his voice sounds as if it's starting to fray a tiny bit, he can still belt it out pretty convincingly for a guy who's been making records since 1974. The vast majority of
's albums fall into one of two categories -- brilliant and real good.
falls into the latter file, which means it isn't a revelation like
Two Bit Monsters
or
Bring the Family
, but it's got good songs sang by a great songwriter, and played by a rockin' little band with a real fine guitarist up front, and if that's not what you're looking for, you're probably not much on
anyway. ~ Mark Deming