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List Price: $12.98 | | Label: Ultimatum
Salesrank: 177654
Released: September 25, 2001 |
| Our Price: $8.23 |
| Used Price: $1.99 |
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| Media: Audio CD |
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Walk Alone Track Listing:
1. Texas Sun
2. Blade
3. Seven Steps
4. Interstate Cannonball
5. Walk Alone
6. Truckstop In La Grange
7. 440 Horses
8. Lonesome Sky
9. Trains Gonna Roll
10. Memphis Woman
11. Silver Wings
12. Crying Over You
13. Nowhere Town (Bonus Track)
14. Spanish Eyes (Bonus Track)
Walk Alone Reviews:
great album from an underappreciated band 
2003-10-12 - this album is simply great from start to finish.great songwriting and excellent musicianship throughout.i felt compelled to write this after reading reviews from others who obviously do not get it.being a fan of true country music for many years,having seen all of the greats ,legends,and relativley unknowns perform,ones such as johnny cash,merle haggard,george jones,dwight yoakam,and dale watson,i can say that bsojc deserves to be counted in that group,after seeing them live recently at fitzgeralds in berwyn,illinois,where they put on one of the best shows i have ever seen(i have seen all types of rock, metal ,and blues shows as well)i can honestly say they are a great live act as well as really great guys to meet and speak with.i reccomend picking up this cd and giving it a real good listen.
Country for those who listen to rock 
2002-11-30 - The band sounds like a rock band trying to do what they think is country. Almost every ages-old cliche of honky tonk music is evident with songs about truck driving, "Having every waitress" and the obligatory drinking songs.
I would recommend Dale Watson, The Derailers or Stan Martin before them.
One of my top 10 favorite Cd's of all time! 
2002-10-03 - Upbeat, fun, definitely country... absolutely an AWESOME Cd to listen to.. especially while driving! A good Cd to listen to when you don't want to hear anything sad or whining. I love it when I discover new bands and they rock this much! :)
Modern straight-up country, 'cept better. 
2002-08-30 - The title here is certinaly misleading; one is likely to read it thinking they're going to find another entry in the new and wonderful world of dark, back-alley, grindout punk/alt country coming out of Chicago and elsewhere these days. But if you're looking for something in the vein of The Blacks or Split Lip Rayfield, you won't find it here. Instead you get well written and well played, if a little uninteresting, modern radio friendly country music without the mawkish and overproduced pop sensibility of the stuff we actually get to hear on the radio. Texas Sun, Memphis Woman, and 440 Horses aren't songs that are going to redefine the genre of modern country, and they aren't going to shed any particularly new light on the world of roots country, but they're still great songs. They ain't Ralph Stanley, they ain't Jon Langford, and they sure as ...ain't Johnny Cash, but they're definitely worth a listen.
The Most Undeserved Name In The History Of Music 
2002-05-04 - Having read the review of the band Nine Pound Hammer ...describing Nine Pound Hammer as "the bastard sons of Johnny Cash," I was expecting something interesting and edgy. I was very disappointed. Whereas,Johnny Cash's voice and music can not be mistaken for any other,this sounds like average cookie cutter country band trying to fly under the banner of "alternative." It's the equivalent of calling the group WHAM!, the bastard sons of Johnny Thunders.