Search - Daylon Wear :: Texas Twister

Texas Twister
Daylon Wear
Texas Twister
Genres: Country, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1


     
   

CD Details

All Artists: Daylon Wear
Title: Texas Twister
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 1
Label: Free Falls Ent.
Release Date: 5/8/2001
Genres: Country, Pop
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 688197701520
 

CD Reviews

Texas Music at its best!!
Doak Snead | Nashville | 05/24/2001
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Daylon Wear is a soul that sings. Maybe its his Texas roots or the bleeding road dog in him, whatever, his voice rings (and wrings!!) of pain, sensitivity & cockiness. In Nashville sexy girls have called him "the voice" (just listen to "Fast Enough" and "I Got the Time"). "Tornado Alley" skirts strapped down double-wides with Lubbock- like images of one who has lived there, and left. Reminiscent of Tony Joe White and a sad old George Jones, his voice reaches out and paints like a master, and in my opinion, is the style of the future of country rock music. This CD is one you should own and keep in one of your CD changer slots for good Texas quick fixes."
5 Star Billboard Album Review!
Andrea L. Rabak | nashville, tn United States | 05/20/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Daylon Wear is a Texas singer/songwriter now working in Nashville and beginning to make a name for himself with original takes on the eternal verities of country music. Wear kicks off songs like "When The Whiskey Walks In," a new look at country's ever-dependable drinking-song topic. "You walked out, the whiskey walked in," he sings, and it just gets sadder and sadder from there. Wear wrote or co-wrote all 12 songs here, and his co-writers are some of Music Row's best: Bill LaBounty, Mark D. Sanders, Tony Mullins, John Jarrard, Steve Seskin, Bob DiPiero, Debi Cochran and Bob Regan. Songs such as "Tornado Alley" convincingly evoke the sense of time and place of the rural Southwest. "Fast Enough" is a tale of small-town desperadoes-with a rocking beat. "Movin' My Heart Around" is a country-R&B fusion that conjures up the demons of loneliness. "I Got The Time" is the kind of evocative double-entendre country weeper that George Jones used to record. Wear has a husky, slightly worn voice that is perfectly suited to these songs' musical moods. If Springsteen had grown up in central Texas, he might have sounded much like this progressive writer-singer who manages to span country's present and past. There is a wonderful review of the Daylon Wear/Texas Twister CD from Billboard Magazine by top music critic -- CHET FLIPPOA Daylon Wear Fan!"