Search
 Music

Pop

Blues

Christian & Gospel

Classic Rock

Hard Rock & Metal

Jazz

R&B

Broadway & Vocalists

New Age

Soundtracks

Rap & Hip-Hop

International

Children's Music

Country

Alt-Country & Americana

Singer-Songwriters

Western Swing

Compilations

Bluegrass

Cowboy

Today's Country

Live Albums

Neotradtional

Instrumental

Classic Country

Outlaw Country

Roadhouse Country

General

Rock

Dance & DJ

Folk

Classical

Miscellaneous

Latin Music

Alternative Rock

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Home

Music

Country

Electric Dirt

Electric Dirt

Email a friendEmailView larger imageZoom

Electric Dirt  (Audio CD) 
by Levon Helm

 
SKU:  

015707986120

In Stock
Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
 
 

2009 release from the former member of The Band, the highly anticipated follow-up to the Grammy winning Dirt Farmer album (2007). Electric Dirt again finds Levon steeped in tradition in his connection to the land and those who live by it, but this record goes deeper and wider, incorporating Gospel, Blues and Soul elements in a bracing collection of originals and carefully chosen outside songs. As with Dirt Farmer, multi-instrumentalist Larry Campbell took the reigns as producer and the album was recorded at The Barn/Levon Helm Studios.

 
List Price: $18.98
Our Price: $13.79 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
You Save: $5.19 (27%)
 
 

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.


Product Promotions
  • Buy a CD or a vinyl record, get a $1 Amazon MP3 Credit. Limit one promotional credit per customer.  Here's how (restrictions apply)

Product Details
Audio CD Release Date:June 30, 2009
Studio:Vanguard Records
Number Of Discs:1
Average Customer Rating: based on 63 reviews

Track Listing
1. Tennessee Jed
2. Move Along Train
3. Growing Trade
4. Golden Bird
5. Stuff You Gotta Watch
6. White Dove
7. King Fish
8. You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had
9. When I Go Away
10. Heaven's Pearls
11. I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to be Free

Features
  • Record Label: Emi

  • Catalog#: 0798612

  • Country Of Release: NLD

  • Year Of Release: 2009


Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 63 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

65 of 71 found the following review helpful:


4ELECTRIC DIRT  Jun 30, 2009 By Stuart Jefferson
One disc 46 minutes approximately. The sound is crisp yet warm,which suits Helm's songs and voice perfectly.
This album is a continuation of Helm's fine previous (Grammy winning) release "Dirt Farmer",yet it builds on that album's feel. This time out there are electric guitars that replace the previous albums overall acoustic sound. Yet "Electric Dirt" has that same lived in,down-home feel,due in large part to Helm's wonderful aching vocals. The arrangements by Larry Campbell are just right,making each track stand out yet all the tracks form a seamless whole. A combination of up-tempo tracks combine with slower tunes that show Helm's voice is comfortable with either one. His voice sounds most authentic on the slower tracks,which give the feeling of this music being much older than it is. In some ways Helm's voice and inflection (though Helm's voice is in a lower range) sounds a bit like the wonderful Roscoe Holcomb (give Holcomb a try if you want to go deeper into this style of music),a favorite of Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton,who sang about his times in the Kentucky Mountains.
The band is made up of Helm's musician pals from his famous "barn" concerts in Woodstock,N.Y. This is important to someone with Helm's authentic musical credentials that go back many years to his most famous group,THE BAND. Helm's voice needs the sympathetic back-up from musicians who know his music intimately. Instrumentation ranges from guitars to fiddles to mandolins to accordions,with a touch of keyboards mixed in,along with the standard rhythm section. On four tracks there is a small horn section which helps flesh out the music.
The songs are a combination of the well known ("Tennessee Jed",made famous by the GRATEFUL DEAD,"Stuff You Gotta Watch" and "You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had",by Muddy Waters) to a song by Carter Stanley,and one tune by the great writer Randy Newman,among others. Together these songs blend together to make another inspired release by Helm. The vocals are helped along by his daughter Amy Helm and Teresa Williams,which give those tracks added feel and depth. But the tracks that feature Helm alone on vocals are the most riveting. There is so much feeling wrapped up in his voice that the words sometimes take a backseat to his arresting style.
This album is another example of "American" music,music that has it's roots in times past. The combination of good songs,good playing,and Helm's lived-in,seen-it-all,last chance voice is the real deal. Listeners who liked Helm's previous album,"Dirt Farmer",will find this album to be a fine companion to it.
If you haven't heard Levon Helm you're missing some real music played and sung by someone special. This album is refreshing,it's honest music played honestly. For that reason it stands out from most everything today. Do yourself a favor and pick this up.

32 of 34 found the following review helpful:


5Levon's Best  Jul 17, 2009 By o dubhthaigh
This is more appropriately the best album the Band never made. It certainly is Levon's best. A follow up to Dirt Farmer, but with more punch, the band crackles all the way through and both his daughter Amy and Larry Campbell are stalwart colleagues who deliver the goods. Amy is amazing - she her old man's swagger and sway with a voice full of the deep south and close to the floor. Campbell is not just an amazing guitarist. He obliterates whatever it was that Robertson once brought to Levon's efforts.
And that is critical. In many of the tunes, one's imagination immediately inserts virtual harmonies from Danko and and Manuel. Of course, they're gone, but you can almost hear them coming in. The horns would put you in mind of the wonder that Hudson would effect. As for Levon Helm's drumming, he has a snap, roll and swing in finer form than I have ever heard. His voice is back as well. Midnight Rambles and time have brought a large measure of restoration to one of America's most iconic singers.
The songwriting is crisp and draws on Muddy Waters, Happy Traum, Jerry Garcia, Levon and Larry Campbell, Pop Staples and Carter Stanley, among others. "When I Go Away" ranks with "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down."
All in all, superb in every regard. Pick this up!

23 of 25 found the following review helpful:


5Wonderful if you like the full Ramble Sound  Jun 30, 2009 By F. Tyndall
If you liked Dirt Farmer, but prefer the fuller sound of his live Rambles, then this is the album for you. More upbeat, and featuring more horns, this album sounds like the Ramble, but with better production than most of the recordings I have of the Ramble on the Road.

Larry Campbell's production and playing both sound great. Levon's voice is strong. Even after first listen some of the new songs are pretty catchy and the covers are almost perfectly done.

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:


4The Real Roots of The Band  Aug 02, 2009 By Curly Q. Link
In music recording, there's sometimes an idea that one "real" element can lend credibility to an otherwise "fake" blend; for example, a mix made entirely on synthesizers will sound altogether more realistic if you add just one live acoustic track, a guitar, a bass, a sax etc. This same principle applied to the classic '70's rock band called The Band, a group that played music heavily rooted in the traditions of the American South, whose members were actually from the deep south-----of Canada! Only Arkansas farm boy Levon Helm was the true "roots" member, and his clarion drawl gave The Band's sound 90% of its authenticity. Who else could have sung "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" with more real feeling? Sounded like he had actually witnessed the Civil War. Of course Richard Manuel & Rick Danko were great singers too, but listen to "Rag Mama Rag", "Up On Cripple Creek", "The Weight", "When I Paint My Masterpiece", etc. and hear how many of The Band's finest songs featured Levon's soulful moan. So it's rewarding to hear Levon's newest efforts reaffirming & cementing his role as a legendary American folk artist. The albums "Dirt Farmer" and now "Electric Dirt" wisely reassert Levon's country blues roots, with solid support from daughter Amy and a winning group of backing musicians. Helm's voice sounds a bit ragged here & there after his struggle with throat cancer, but overall his singing is still the Levon we know & love, and the grittiness works with this type of music. The one minor complaint could be that, given the title, the album could have been a bit more "electric"; there is still a fair amount of acoustic instrumentation here. But overall, "Electric Dirt" succeeds well and is another very strong effort from a musician who has weathered the many roads of experience and keeps getting better.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


5Excellent CD  Jun 28, 2010 By Wil Burns
This CD is tremendous! Buy it - along with Levon Helm's Dirt Farmer. You'll be glad you did! Both won grammy awards!

See all 63 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 About UsContact Us
 
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore