Search - Justin Trevino :: Scene of the Crying

Scene of the Crying
Justin Trevino
Scene of the Crying
Genres: Country, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

Justin Trevino grows impressively as a Texas hard-country singer, and this, his fourth album of shuffles and ballads, is his best. His sweet, trembling voice has more color and his phrasing is less showy on this survey of ...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Justin Trevino
Title: Scene of the Crying
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Texas Music Group
Release Date: 11/12/2002
Genres: Country, Pop
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 049891401022

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Justin Trevino grows impressively as a Texas hard-country singer, and this, his fourth album of shuffles and ballads, is his best. His sweet, trembling voice has more color and his phrasing is less showy on this survey of emotional train wrecks. There's not much in the way of upbeat songs here: if the lead track "Two Empty Glasses" sets the scene, the succeeding title song (written by his steel player Dicky Overbey) cinches it. With only one other original (by fiddler Ernie Reed), Trevino draws on material by or associated with well-known writers and singers like Jack Greene, George Jones, Justin Tubb, Johnny Paycheck, and Bill Anderson, but the material is usually so obscure that he easily fashions it into his own statement. You won't find devastating story songs like "She Didn't Color Daddy" (first done by Wynn Stewart) anywhere else. If straight-ahead, heart-hitting honky-tonk is your cup of spirits, Trevino's your man. --John Morthland

Similarly Requested CDs

 

CD Reviews

Pure Country Magic
Walter Stettner | Vienna Austria | 06/22/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This CD is simply amazing. When I buy CDs, usually I do some quick listening in the beginning, just to get a quick impression, this one I put in and listened from the beginning to end. In a time of cheap throwaway music, made for Top 40 stations and supermarkets, Justin Trevino comes along with another record full of classic country shuffles, a sound reminiscent of Ray Price, Mel Tillis and Johnny Bush. The record features lots of great songs, all of them 101% Country. A special word for Steel Guitar enthusiasts (I'm a Steel Player myself!): Listen to Dickie Overby and you'll know how a Steel Guitar can add the frosting to the cake! Dickie Overby is still well remembered from his work with Darrell McCall and Connie Smith in the 1960's.Get this one as fast as you can!"
Shuffle across Texas
Jerome Clark | Canby, Minnesota | 03/19/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)

"By his own testimony, Justin Trevino is one of two young artists (the other being Fort Worth's Jake Hooker) keeping the Texas honkytonk-shuffle alive -- the sort of music associated with Ray Price, Charlie Walker, Johnny Bush, and others who once rocked, or at least shuffled, many a jukebox, and not just in the Lonestar state. Trevino's talents are so immense, his immersion in the sound so total, that you can't love this kind of music and not be thrilled at what Trevino does with it. On the other hand, if your idea of country has the adjective "hot" in front of it, this probably is not for you.Here, on his fourth CD, the 30-year-old Trevino is joined on two cuts by Wanda Jackson (on the fabulous "What Have We Done") and by Opry veteran Jimmy C. Newman (on the joyously swinging "Daydreaming"). Trevino's encyclopedic frame of country-music reference gives him access to lesser known but worthy songs from the catalogs of Bill Anderson, the late Johnny Paycheck, Mel Tillis, Jack Greene, and others. The mood is mostly dark, as is most memorable country music, but Trevino's touch is light and assured, and the songs are moving but not depressing. It's supposed to sound like this, and in Trevino's music it does."
I knew Justin in school
Pat McCurry | Wilton, NH United States | 02/09/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I went to school with Justin Trevino in high school (Lockhart High School in Lockhart, TX) and I will tell you that music was his first love then and his first love now. You could always catch him around campus with his guitar and he knew the music well. He even sold his first album to kids at school, and he would perform at assemblies and talent shows. Every note and every chord seemed embedded into memory. Months after I graduated, I came back into town and right when I came in, his name was posted on a bar marquee. I knew he would go on to big things. Last year, I did an internet search on him and he was everywhere on the internet. I have listened to samples on this album and I can say that Justin has come full circle. His voice has matured well and has got the harmonies down perfect. Even though this is not my type of music, he does a good job. Way to go, Justin."