John Prine Music:

Standard Songs for Average People



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John Prine Music:
Standard Songs for Average People



Music
Standard Songs for Average People
by John Prine & Mac Wiseman

Standard Songs for Average People
List Price: $16.98Label: Oh Boy

Salesrank: 16136

Released: April 24, 2007
Our Price: $11.99
Used Price: $10.88
Media: Audio CD

Standard Songs for Average People Track Listing:
1. Blue Eyed Elaine
2. Don't Be Ashamed of Your Age
3. I Forgot to Remember to Forget
4. I Love You Because
5. Pistol Packin' Mama
6. Saginaw, Michigan
7. Old Dogs, Children and Watermelon Wine
8. Old Cape Cod
9. Death of Floyd Collins
10. Blue Side of Lonesome
11. In the Garden
12. Just the Other Side of Nowhere
13. Old Rugged Cross
14. Where the Blue of the Night

Editorial Review:
Things don't get much schmaltzier than a Dobro played Hawaiian style, which is why it's fitting that Cowboy Jack Clement offers one up on "The Blue Side of Lonesome," Leon Payne's dated but charming classic--only one such excursion into blue-haired reminiscing on an album of over-the-top sentimentality. It was the legendary Clement who paired smart-ass folkie Prine and bluegrass totem Wiseman, but the singers themselves chose the repertoire, which reads like songs people of a certain age might pick on a dry drunk. The tunes range, believe it or not, from religious hymns to covers of Patti Page's 1957 hit "Old Cape Cod," Kris Kristofferson's underrated "Just the Other Side of Nowhere," and Tom T. Hall's "Old Dogs, Children, and Watermelon Wine," with a little Elvis and Ernest Tubb thrown in for good measure. It's fitting that Prine and Wiseman revisit the Hall standard, since oddly, both singers vocally favor the Nashville storyteller from time to time. But one has to question their use of the Grand Ole Opry's Carol Lee Singers, who show up on several cuts and seem, well, just bizarre on a John Prine record, even as they evoke the lushly famous Nashville Sound of the 1960s. Suffice it to say, this is a quirky project, and if Prine's scratchy baritone and Wiseman's melodic tenor sometimes overlap to where you can't tell who's singing what, it doesn't much matter. You're listening to two new pals having what seems to be the time of their life. --Alanna Nash

Standard Songs for Average People Reviews:
For Sentimental Reasons 5 Star Review
2008-12-13 - The most credible reviewers tend to be those who refer to specifics. Hold my check then, Amazon! This reviewer has his own airy theories as to the provenance of this album at this time. Intimations of mortality. From what I understand, John Prine is a recovering, or recovered, neck cancer patient. So, it would seem that not only mortality but livelihood have been on the line with Mr. Prine over the last few years.
Such stress tends to soften the heart of an already empathetic person. One starts thinking of one's life, his influences, and those ineffable experiences that bring a soul to the age of sixty-five. "Thanks," is in order, just as, "I love you, and I appreciate what you've done for me," come more readily to mind. Time for posing is over; time to get real and feel good about yourself and your blessings. Time to reference old friends.
That's how I have taken this album, as an act of grace. It works.

We love the CD* 5 Star Review
2008-09-28 - Welove this CD, buy it and kick back and ENJOY some really good music. :~)

less carol, more geritol 2 Star Review
2008-04-19 - I have loved John Prine ever since his first album, and Mac Wiseman has built a much-loved legacy, but "quirky" is a generous descriptor for this effort. Maybe they shoulda hung out around a backyard grill a few days before they recorded. Maybe they did, I don't know. As one earlier reviewer said, I really wanted to love this, but I felt as if I was just working too hard at it. The choice of songs from a pair of guys with their repertoires can always be second-guessed, but that isn't my criticism either. These are great songs. There just doesn't seem to be the energy I had hoped for. There's just too much Carol Lee and not enough juice. Maybe they weren't making the set I wanted them to, but it got over-produced into a time capsule insert, or something.

I wasn't looking for a squeaky-clean composite. That's not John Prine. Nor did I hope for bluegrass de luxe. That's not Mac Wiseman. I think it should be renamed "The Carol Lee Singers and Some Great Nashville Studio Pros Present a Period Piece for the Shower, featuring JP and MW."

OK, that's cold. But if I'm being unfair, it's in a time when the same Mac Wiseman can team up with Del McCoury and Doc Watson and produce a cleaner, more evocative collection Del Doc & Mac and Ricky Skaggs, 80-ish Doc and Earl Scruggs can make "Three Pickers." It's a shame this didn't come up to the same level.

Top Shelf 5 Star Review
2007-11-28 - Totally top shelf, John Prine always sings the truth. Mr. Wiseman is new to me but they blend perfectly together. They present an album that can be played right through and enjoyed over and over again.
Music and poetry are combined to make an artform. I'm just a standard person but I know that if the art makes you feel something it's among the best. Of course, we all have different taste in art but this is an easy one, for everyone. John Prine challenges the world with a lot of his songs which, to me, are more like poems set to music. This album is a more of the "just for fun type". The title here is perfect. Try Great Days: The John Prine Anthology you'll love that too.

Standard Songs for Average people 5 Star Review
2007-11-09 - I was glad to see something new out by Mac Wiseman. I was not familiar with John Prime, but he has a good strong voice and I thought they sounded good together. I would gladly buy it again.










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