Search - Dwight Yoakam :: Blame the Vain

Blame the Vain
Dwight Yoakam
Blame the Vain
Genres: Country, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

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CD Details

All Artists: Dwight Yoakam
Title: Blame the Vain
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: New West Records
Release Date: 6/14/2005
Genres: Country, Pop, Rock
Styles: Americana, Roadhouse Country, Classic Country, Today's Country, Neotraditional, Country Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 607396607525

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CD Reviews

The Best Is Yet To Come
prisrob | New EnglandUSA | 07/02/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Dwight Yoakam has written and produced his 18th album, and he has given birth to a fabulous CD. "And that's what this is - I'm still me, but maybe it's just more me on this record." said Dwight. The twelve songs that make up "Blame The Vain" may "tell the story of the end of a love affair between a couple," says Yoakum, "but the subtext is about my love for music. I'm really looking forward to playing this stuff on the road!"



Dwight Yoakam stated writing his music in 2002 after he came off a long tour. He came upon a group in LA, of the "tough" country music he was used to playing, and he joined in the jams. He found some new musicians, a guitarist, Keith Gattis. Keith's buddies, drummer Mitch Marine and bassist Dave Roe (a 12-year veteran of Johnny Cash's band), joined Yoakam and a band was formed. Dwight began to write and sing melodies. They turned into some of the best music he has played in years. The songs are between rock and country and bluegrass and hillbilly. "Blame The Vain" and "Intentional Heartache" are getting all the airplay, and they have the rockabilly sound associated with Dwight Yoakam. "Just Passing Time" and "I'll Pretend" bring us back to the story of Dwight and a relationship remembered. "I Want To Love Again" has the impassioned sound of a man looking for love and "The Last Heart In Line" brings the story to a conclusion and we all agree. It is tine for Dwight to love again.



As Dwight Yoakam explains," I think it's a unique moment for me musically - and hopefully a time for people who have been listening to my music all along to re-experience me with this." This is the best of the best.. Dwight has reached a pinnacle and he has shown us all that he can fly all alone. Highly recommended. prisrob

"
I miss Pete too, but this is just as good if you ask me...
Frank Garon | Breinigsville, PA United States | 07/01/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I didn't even know Pete left. I was reading the CD notes and was like "where the heck is Pete in all this?". Always thought he was

absolutely a key part of the whole DY experience - I will never forget when I saw DY at Roseland in NYC about ten years ago. This was right about when "Gone" came out, and the band was as good as the singer : - )



Having said all that, the absence of Pete is honestly not a bad thing. (Sorry, Pete, I still love you man!)The new guitar dude sounds great - maybe one small notch below Pete (Pete knew how to play, you have to give the man that much) - but very, very competent indeed.



Dwight does sound like he's alive and having fun on this one - noticeably more so than a couple other CD's I have of his. And I've been a loyal fan since Guitars, Cadillacs, mind you. Some of the stuff on this CD is as good as his old, early stuff and that is saying a lot.



Buy this one for sure - well worth the money. This is what REALLY good country music sounds like!"
He's Back & Better Than Ever
DYTSTILROX | TRAVELING THE WEST | 06/14/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

""Blame the Vain"could very well go down as the quintessential Dwight. Raw, edgy, less refined in parts than his previous releases? Indeed it is. But it is still a slick piece of work that hints, in one cut or another, at almost every influence Yoakam has ever embraced. From the ranting within "Intentional Heartache" and "She'll Remember" to the moving "Last Heart in Line" Yoakam covers the myriad of emotions involved in tumultuous relationships. The move to the stripped down arrangements on many of the songs does nothing but accentuate the power of Yoakam's true instrument, his voice. Throughout the entire lineup of songs Dwight Yoakam takes unexpected turns. Risky? Perhaps, but well worth the risk. This should prove to the naysayers (if there are ANY left out there) that Yoakam's "This Time" was no fluke. It proves Yoakam can put out a winner even working without the long time safety net of Pete Anderson's guitar and production skills. With "Just Passing Time" Dwight reminds us how skilled he is with painting lyrical pictures. "Blame the Vain" as a whole should prove to any who have ever doubted him, that Yoakam is the real deal. The guitar work thoughout by Texas native Keith Gattis, an artist in his own right, helps give this Dwight Yoakam project an entirely new sound. Still, the foundations of early Yoakam are indeed there and show themselves frequently. But the overall sound is a sound which the Yoakam / Gattis duo has honed to near perfection in the last couple of years of performing together during Yoakam's last stint on the road. What you have here is just that, near perfection. With all the cuts written and produced by the man himself, what you hear on this record is probably the closest to what Yoakam hears in his head, when he first sets out to write a song, as you're ever going to get."