Search - Scott Miller & the Commonwealth :: For Crying Out Loud

For Crying Out Loud
Scott Miller & the Commonwealth
For Crying Out Loud
Genre: Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

Singer/songwriter/roots rock. Jointly produced by Michael Webb and Doug Lanceo. New original songs. Last studio release in 2006. Guest artists: Patty Griffin, Doug Lanceo, Tim O'Brien.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Scott Miller & the Commonwealth
Title: For Crying Out Loud
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: F.A.Y. Recordings
Release Date: 4/14/2009
Genre: Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 884501104081

Synopsis

Product Description
Singer/songwriter/roots rock. Jointly produced by Michael Webb and Doug Lanceo. New original songs. Last studio release in 2006. Guest artists: Patty Griffin, Doug Lanceo, Tim O'Brien.
 

CD Reviews

Pop, rock, country and blues from former V-Roy
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 04/14/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"From the top: this is not Scott Miller of Game Theory (or the Loud Family), nor is it the Scott Miller who's self-released five blues albums throughout the last decade, nor the Scott Miller who played drums for Agent Orange. It is, in fact, the Scott Miller who sang, played guitar and wrote songs for the late `90s power-twang band, the V-Roys. Since the group's demise, Miller's been recording solo albums and performing with a revolving aggregation called the Commonwealth. After three studio releases and a live set on Sugar Hill, this self-released album features a similar blend of country and rock influences, though with acoustic power chords mostly replacing electric.



The album opens with the ranting anthem, "Cheap Ain't Cheap (For Crying Out Loud)," expressing a sideways anticipation of the New Depression. The album's up-tempo numbers include driving acoustics, New Orleans-tinged country-rock, and the Blasters' styled roots of "Claire Marie." These are interwoven with singer-songwriter tunes that include the Celtic harmony duet "I'm Right Here, My Love," sung with Patty Griffin, and the solo closer, "Appalachian Refugee." The acoustic works turns darker on the expose "Sin in Indiana," and the low twanging "Double Indemnity" harbors noirish secrets in its blue notes.



Miller can seem like a glass-half-empty romanticist; blowing blue harmonica as he declares his faults on "Let You Down" and shying away from opportunity on "Heart in Harm's Way." But the sentiments are coy in their hope that honest declaration and cautious refusal will ward off imagined disasters; think Nick Lowe, Ben Vaughn and Tom T. Hall (whose "I Can't Dance" is covered here). Miller transitions smoothly between pop, rock, country and blues, and though at time you'll wish he'd alight on one for more than a song at a time, the next tune always sweeps you away. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]"
Scott Miller: Knoxville's Viceroy
J. Hooten | The South | 06/08/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

""For Crying Out Loud" is Scott's best record to date. Don't forget that every album he has created is filled with classic songs that stick in your head or cause you to hum long after the needle has left the record, but this latest effort is solid all the way through. "Cheap Ain't Cheap" is a great way to start off the album- honest, blunt, to the point, a great thesis statement on the current economy, not to mention the music biz. "Sin in Indiana" is another well-written song with an assorted mix of motley characters that anyone could find truth in. "I'm Right Here, My Love" -wow, just listen and you'll know what i mean. The closing set of songs "Feel So Fair to Midland" and "Double Indemnity" is such a kick-a** way to wrap it all up. Buy this album and then check out the rest of Scott Miller's work."