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DANIEL
HUTCHENS - Love Songs for Losers
September 29, 2006
To many, Daniel
Hutchens is amongst, if not the, single greatest of the obscure
songwriters in this modern age. His songs are met with mixed
critical acclaim (you love them, or hate them), yet no one would
dare rate his work anywhere near average. Love Songs
for Losers, his second collection of solo material apart
from his longtime band Bloodkin, was recorded this past spring at
Dave Barbe's studio in Athens, and is the inaugural release of the
new Autumn Tone label.
Most of the
songs on this CD are newly penned, reflecting events of Hutchens
recent life. These includes "Underground Café,
1923," a reflective piece that well could have easily been
written by Mark Twain early in the 20th century; and "Unconditional,"
a song of a man experiencing a vibrant new love, filled with hope
an possibility. Other tracks were written throughout Hutchen's
career, and are finally seeing the light of day on this new release.
These include 'Red Velvet Cake," "Sacrifice," and
the tear-jerking "Rock Back Home," about the longing of
a man living the hard life of the road, serenading his love back
home.
Love Songs
for Losers is filled songs of love, both current and of
days gone by; good times mixed with sad; joyous heartbreak and misery.
There may be love today, yet you know you'll eventually come down,
a fact Hutchens never overlooks. Along with the possibility
of love, he also songs of that looming air of despair, the haunting
knowledge that good times enjoyed now will not last, and tears will
once again fill the eyes and the heart.
Love Songs
for Losers is definitively Danny, a must have for anyone
that has ever enjoyed even a single verse from the vast catalogue
of this musical Mark Twain for the 21st century
"just
like an addiction, that you ain't sure you really want to kick."
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