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Dollars and Dimes
Owen Temple
Dollars and Dimes
Genre: Country
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Dollars and Dimes, the fifth studio record from Austin, Texas-based songwriter Owen Temple, is a collection of eleven songs about people making their way through hard times in the different regions of North America. Th...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Owen Temple
Title: Dollars and Dimes
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: El Paisano Records
Release Date: 6/9/2009
Genre: Country
Style: Americana
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 654165018129

Synopsis

Product Description
Dollars and Dimes, the fifth studio record from Austin, Texas-based songwriter Owen Temple, is a collection of eleven songs about people making their way through hard times in the different regions of North America. The project includes songs written by Owen Temple and co-writes with Adam Carroll, Gordy Quist (of the Band of Heathens), Scott Nolan and others. A concept album focused on regional incarnations of continent-wide drama, Dollars and Dimes was produced by multi-instrumentalist Gabe Rhodes (Billy Joe Shaver, Kimmie Rhodes). Produced by Gabriel Rhodes OWEN TEMPLE Vocals, Acoustic Guitar
GABRIEL RHODES Acoustic Guitar, High Strung Guitar, Electric Guitar, Ukelele, Pump Organ, Piano
WILL SEXTON Bass, Electric Guitar, Background Vocals
HUNT SALES Drums, Percussion, Electric Guitar
BRIAN STANDEFER Cello
MICHAEL THOMPSON Piano
ADAM CARROLL Harmonica
 

CD Reviews

Soulful country-folk-rock travelogue of today's North Americ
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 06/17/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"
Austinite Owen Temple takes inspiration for his fifth album from his extensive travels as a touring musician, and from Joel Garreau's book The Nine Nations of North America. Garraeu argues that national and state borders are mere geographical lines that fail to surround populations of like interests and lives. He proposes nine regions, such as Ecotopia (the northwest coast), Breadbasket (the midwest US and Canada), and Foundry (the industrial northeast) that are held together by shared economic interests and cultural beliefs. He asserts that what people do (or, in the current recession, don't do) defines their common character more clearly than borders drawn from rivers or arbitrary surveyor's marks.



Temple explores this idea in a set of songs drawn from impressions or observations of these regions, from the rusting industrial dreams of "Broken Heart Land," through the vast emptiness of "Black Diamond" and the title track's study of the migrations that built and sustain America. He examines the social mobility that's led many to wander rootlessly from metropolis to metropolis, often draining into the artificial oasis of Southern California ("Los Angeles is the city of the future, and it's coming to get you"). He draws sharp portraits of working people whose labors are for "making a life, not just a living," as well as those sick of their daily grind. It's not as dark as Slaid Cleaves' Everything You Love Will Be Taken Away, but stands on the same observational singer-songwriter ground.



There's a very American streak of nostalgia in many of these songs, including the fictional transplants who find adopted homes not what they expected, and Temple's own memories of his early days in Austin and later years in the frigid north turn his pen inward. This is a more studied album than 2008's Two Thousand Miles, though it retains the same soulful folk-country sound. Temple's stock taking creates a more personal, more interior, less archetypal version of the Americana travelogues Johnny Cash wrote in the 1960s. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]"