Paul Burch - Last of My Kind

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Album Details

Title: Last of My Kind
Artist: Paul Burch
Release Date: 4/24/2001
Re-Released On: 11/5/2001
Label: Merge , Spit & Polish
UPCs: 036172949625, 0805520210379, 805520210379
Genre: Country
Styles: Alt-Country, Americana, Alternative/Indie Rock
Moods: Bittersweet, Intimate, Literate, Melancholy, Passionate, Somber, Cerebral, Earnest, Poignant, Reflective, Rousing, Sentimental
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Aliceville Rag
  2. Up on the Mountain
  3. Living up to the Man You See in Me
  4. Harvey Hartsell's Farm
  5. Going to the Carnival
  6. Mama Shoo'd the Blackbirds
  7. Country Boys in a City Alley
  8. Sun Don't Shine
  9. Electricity
  10. Polio
  11. Amos's Blues
  12. Last of My Kind
  13. Nightjar

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2001CDMerge 496
2001CDSpit & Polish006

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Last of My Kind may be the first ever soundtrack to a book. Nashville musician Paul Burch wrote the gritty folk tunes on the album as an accompaniment to his friend Tony Earley's Depression-era coming-of-age novel, -Jim the Boy. Like Earley's universal Mark Twain-esque story, Burch's songs come right from Americans' subconscious, from the collective myth of americana crystallized in Huck Finn, Tom Joad, and Jay Gatsby. With a similar flair to the Coen brothers' barn-raising O Brother Where Art Thou? soundtrack, Last of My Kind fits well with the raspy narratives, creepy ballads, and back-porch stomps of Harry Smith's brilliant Anthology of American Folk Music. Burch's songs have their own stories to tell, whether he's singing of the game of life in a pure, clear voice on "Up on the Mountain"

("Where the honeysuckle grows/The world below laid out plain for me to see like a board of Monopoly") or recounting the story of a murderous farmer in the spooky shuffle "Harvey Hartsell's Farm." Burch's brilliance lies in the fact that he has created a period album pulled out of the past but imbued with a contemporary relevance and resonance that make it just as poignant as a novel of the same sort. As he sings in the title track, "Today I came to realize that I am the last of my kind." ~ Charles Spano, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Jim DeMainMastering
Paul BurchGuitar (Electric), Engineer, Banjo, Bass (Upright), Drums, Producer, Guitar (Acoustic), Liner Notes, Harmonica