The Del McCoury Band - It's Just the Night

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Album Details

Title: It's Just the Night
Artist: The Del McCoury Band
Release Date: 8/12/2003
Label: McCoury Music
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPC: 829305000122
Genre: Country
Styles: Bluegrass, Contemporary Bluegrass
Moods: Amiable/Good-Natured, Earnest, Bittersweet, Earthy, Organic, Plaintive, Poignant, Wistful, Yearning
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 3
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Dry My Tears and Move On
  2. Asheville Turnaround
  3. Let an Old Racehorse Run
  4. Hillcrest Drive [Instrumental]
  5. It's Just the Night
  6. My Love Will Not Change
  7. Fire and the Flame
  8. Zero to Love
  9. I'm Afraid I Forgot the Feeling (That I Had for You)
  10. Man Can't Live on Bread Alone
  11. I Can Hear the Angels Singing
  12. Same Kind of Crazy
  13. Mill Towns
  14. Two-Faced Love

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDMcCoury Music1

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

It had long been presumed that bluegrass patriarch Del McCoury could do no wrong. From his days with Bill Monroe's Blue Grass Boys through his work for Rebel Records in the '70s to his contemporary work with his sons in the Del McCoury Band, every release has had the same consistent attention to quality to match his crystalline high tenor and his bandmates' unparalleled musical skills. On the 2003 release It's Just the Night, something seems to have changed. The pickin' and a-singin' is still pretty strong, but the song selection seems to be uneven, and it almost feels like there's a lack of the usual passion in the performances. The solos lag where they should really rip (even the lightning fingers of Ronnie McCoury seem oddly distracted throughout much of the record), and the deep rich harmonies usually evident in the gospel numbers seem less dynamic than they have in the past. Even the packaging on the album seems to be a broad departure for the band: usually smartly dressed in a relaxed atmosphere, Del and the boys are now thrown into a psychedelic, computer-generated environment which might be more suited for a rave hosted by Tim Burton. All of these factors are disappointing, since Del McCoury albums have been an unflagging example of consistent quality in the contemporary bluegrass scene. Still, even when the band's not at its best, they're still pretty darned good. The opening track, "Dry My Tears and Move On," chugs along like a mountain freight train, and Ronnie's blistering instrumental "Hillcrest Drive" serves as the high point of the record. Unfortunately, the handful of sparks that the band throws off here and there don't match the beauty and intensity of their earlier releases. ~ Zac Johnson, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Brent KingEngineer, Mixing
Del McCouryProducer
Erick AndersonDesign, Art Direction, Photography
Hank WilliamsMastering
Isaac FreemanBass, Guest Appearance, Group Member
J.D. FizerBaritone, Guest Appearance, Group Member
Joe RiceSax (Tenor), Group Member, Guest Appearance
Lee GroitzschAssistant Engineer
Mark HowardEngineer
Robert HamlettGuest Appearance, Group Member
Ronnie McCouryProducer
Stan StricklandArt Direction
Steve ChandlerMixing
The Fairfield FourGuest Appearance
Wilson WatersGuest Appearance, Group Member, Sax (Tenor)