Home
Just Like Medicine [Vinyl Edition]
Barnes and Noble
Just Like Medicine [Vinyl Edition]
Current price: $17.99
![Just Like Medicine [Vinyl Edition]](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0766397469126_p0_v2_s600x595.jpg)
![Just Like Medicine [Vinyl Edition]](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0766397469126_p0_v2_s600x595.jpg)
Barnes and Noble
Just Like Medicine [Vinyl Edition]
Current price: $17.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Following a successful demo session with producer
Dan Penn
,
A.J. Croce
decided to make
Just Like Medicine
-- the singer/songwriter's ninth record -- his first full-fledged soul album.
Croce
and
Penn
assembled a world-class crew of musicians --
Steve Cropper
Vince Gill
are the superstar cameos but the entire band comprises pros -- and then settled into a well-worn groove that recalls the supple Memphis soul of the '60s. Much of the pleasure of
lies in its sheer sonics: it's smooth and soulful, evoking the past but fleet enough to feel fresh. Listen long enough, though, and the variety within
's ten songs becomes apparent. He opens proceedings with the swampy R&B of "Gotta Get Outta My Head," which gives way to the sprightly beat of "The Heart That Makes Me Whole," and by the time the tight half-hour wraps up with the open-ended "The Roads," he's touched upon simmering ballads ("I Couldn't Stop") and nimble, rolling New Orleans-inspired pop ("Full Up").
also unearths the fine "Name of the Game," a previously unrecorded song by his father,
Jim
, but for as good as it is, it's ultimately a grace note on an album that's among his very finest. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Dan Penn
,
A.J. Croce
decided to make
Just Like Medicine
-- the singer/songwriter's ninth record -- his first full-fledged soul album.
Croce
and
Penn
assembled a world-class crew of musicians --
Steve Cropper
Vince Gill
are the superstar cameos but the entire band comprises pros -- and then settled into a well-worn groove that recalls the supple Memphis soul of the '60s. Much of the pleasure of
lies in its sheer sonics: it's smooth and soulful, evoking the past but fleet enough to feel fresh. Listen long enough, though, and the variety within
's ten songs becomes apparent. He opens proceedings with the swampy R&B of "Gotta Get Outta My Head," which gives way to the sprightly beat of "The Heart That Makes Me Whole," and by the time the tight half-hour wraps up with the open-ended "The Roads," he's touched upon simmering ballads ("I Couldn't Stop") and nimble, rolling New Orleans-inspired pop ("Full Up").
also unearths the fine "Name of the Game," a previously unrecorded song by his father,
Jim
, but for as good as it is, it's ultimately a grace note on an album that's among his very finest. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine