Martin Sexton - Black Sheep

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Album Details

Title: Black Sheep
Artist: Martin Sexton
Release Date: 1996
Re-Released On: 11/24/2009
Label: Koch International, Eastern Front, Kitchen Table Records
Duration: 46:35
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 099923816928, 634457158429, 790696011120, 790696011144
Genre: Folk
Styles: Contemporary Folk, Contemporary Singer/Songwriter
Moods: Earnest, Intimate, Autumnal, Bittersweet, Gentle, Literate, Melancholy, Poignant, Reflective, Wistful
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Black Sheep
  2. Glory Bound
  3. Diner
  4. Freedom of the Road
  5. Caught in the Rain
  6. Love Keep Us Together
  7. Over My Head
  8. Gypsy Woman
  9. Candy
  10. Can't Stop Thinking 'Bout You
  11. America the Beautiful

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2004CDKitchen Table Records8169
2000CDKoch International8169
1996CDEastern Front111

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Martin Sexton's acoustic singer/songwriter routine is just one of many flavors here; along with Motown-style r&b, sweeping pop ballads, gypsy fiddling, blues, and jazz, there's even a little rapping. The genre jumping works surprisingly well. Producer Crit Harmon sequences the switches with sensitivity and class, and gives the set a consistent sound -- warm, spontaneous, grounded in acoustics, deeply soulful. Vocally, Sexton handles the stylistic gymnastics with extravagant ease. He'll belt out a tune with all the velvet bombast of Wonder, retreat to a Billie Holiday warble, ascend to an Aaron Neville falsetto, then swagger his way home like Ray Charles or Johnny Popper. There is, however, a cost for his expanded palette: originality. Such soulful singing is rarely set against a sparse folk background (which is often associated with off-key eccentrics like Bob Dylan and Neil Young). As his band imitates the soul masters who influenced his vocals, his act seems less fresh, and stands against somewhat stiffer vocal competition. Sexton has told interviewers that folk music tends to speak only to his head ("like a thick novel"), while simpler pop music hits him in the gut. His songwriting seems to reflect that he edges away from the urban poetry of his Bostonian peers but toward plain old pop, and it's not bad -- his lyrics previously seemed a little overreaching -- but it does make some of the songs on Black Sheep a little less interesting than the ones on his 1991 demo tape, In the Journey. All of the diversity, though, does make the solo acoustic moments all the more gratifying, spotlighting not only Sexton's sensational singing but also his warm, bass-heavy, rhythmically slick acoustic guitar playing. ~ Darryl Cater, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Billy NovickClarinet, Arranger
Brad HatfieldPiano, Synthesizer
Carl BeattyMixing, Engineer
Crit HarmonEngineer, Overdub Engineer, Guitar, Producer, Mixing, Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric)
Dave KirkpatrickAssistant, Assistant Engineer
Greg HoltBass
Harry KingPiano, Organ (Hammond)
Henk KooistraMastering
Jennifer Tobin?
Joe DonnellyDrums, Percussion
Johann Andreas AmonViolin
John TroyBass
Kathy ChapmanGraphic Design, Cover Photo, Photography
Mark ReaPhotography
Martin SextonVocals, Guitar, Drums, Sound Effects, Guitar (Acoustic), Shaker, Percussion, Guitar (Electric)
Ned ClaflinVocals (Background), Liner Notes
Patty GriffinVocals (Background)
Sa DavisPercussion
Sherma AndrewsVocals (Background)