Bad Livers - Horses in the Mines

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Album Details

Title: Horses in the Mines
Artist: Bad Livers
Release Date: 1994
Re-Released On: 4/18/1994
Label: Quarterstick
UPCs: 036172002023, 036172002016
Genre: Country
Styles: Progressive Bluegrass, Old-Timey, Bluegrass, Neo-Traditional Folk
Moods: Rustic, Amiable/Good-Natured, Earthy, Exuberant, Fun, Plaintive, Playful, Quirky, Raucous, Earnest, Organic
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Where They Do Not Know My Name
  2. Turpentine Willie
  3. Old Folks Shuffle
  4. Horses in the Mines
  5. Time and Time Again
  6. Clawhammer Fish
  7. New Bad Liver Singer
  8. High, Lonesome, Dead and Gone
  9. Blue Ridge Express
  10. Shot at a Bird, Hit Me a Stump
  11. Chainsaw Therapy
  12. He Didn't Say a Word
  13. Puke Grub
  14. Yearning
  15. Stevejames
  16. Let's Forgive Each Other

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1994CDQuarterstickQS-20CD

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

For their second album, the Bad Livers have turned in another fine batch of tunes, but this time they've traded the crisp Paul Leary production of the first album for a slightly more murky mix, where the vocals sometimes get a bit lost. The instruments come through just fine, and once again Danny Barnes is in fine form on both guitar and banjo. The songs are topnotch. In particular, the playing and arrangement (for banjo, guitar, dobro, and mandolin) on "He Didn't Say a Word to Me" are exquisite. They also do a wonderful job with the Kentucky Colonels' "Blue Ridge Express." "Clawhammer Fish" and "Where They Do Not Know My Name" really showcase Barnes' banjo technique, and "Horses in the Mines" is a slow country-blues with slide banjo. But they also start taking some slightly experimental chances as well, hinting at what's to come on subsequent albums. About halfway through the album, "New Bad Liver Singer" is a goof-off track with someone's dog (uncredited!) howling along with a harmonica. Following that is "High, Lonesome, Dead and Gone," a song in three parts where you can clearly hear a television set droning on behind the band. The treated vocals on "Shot at a Bird, Hit Me a Stump" and "Puke Grub" pretty much guarantee that a career playing bluegrass festivals is not in the cards. Horses in the Mines is a small step in the evolution of the Bad Livers. While it has a largely traditional sound, its production and experimental tendencies are likely to further alienate any potential traditional bluegrass fans they may have courted, but fans of other bands on the indie label Quarterstick are just as likely to admire their DIY ethic and don't-care attitude. Ironically, this would be their last recording for Quarterstick before moving to the traditional bluegrass label Sugar Hill. ~ Sean Westergaard, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Danny BarnesEngineer, Producer, Guitar, Vocals, Banjo
Edward D. BarnesComposer
Mark RubinVocals, Bass
Ralph WhiteFiddle, Accordion