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see Bangin away. Only drawback is that he needs to "lighten" it up occasionally. I have been been on this train since cd one. He keeps growing and his lyrics are so cutting. This is not a knock against his music but he has the ability to take this listener from deep thought and emotion to deep saturady night fun.
He's a great singer/songwriter. You can hear the influences in his music. If you haven't heard of Chris Knight, do yourself a favor and pick up anything by him. He grew up listening and learning John Prine songs along with Steve Earl.
At times he sounds a bit like Steve Earle, sometimes I hear a bit of Mellencamp, but the more I listen the better it gets. At last I've found another artist who writes quality songs that stand out from the formulaic country pop Brooks & Dunn style. I can't wait to hear his back catalogue.
The few rays of light that penetrate Knight's bleakness are more faith than realization. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com] He exults in the opportunity to rekindle a relationship on the up-tempo "Maria," and takes cold comfort in the scar that's replaced the relationship of "Miles to Memphis."Dan Baird (ex-Georgia Satellites) returns to the producer's seat, having sat out Knight's 2006 release Enough Rope, and the sound returns to the determinedly paced, sinewy Americana the two first crafted for Pretty Good Guy. Knight is often likened to Steve Earle, and the hopelessness in his songs brings to mind Earle's Guitar Town-era work; but where Earle wrote of kids trapped by the stilted imaginations of limited experience, Knight writes of adults trapped by circumstance and situation. Given that Knight practiced his writing for several years before recording his debut, it's unsurprising that in a half-dozen albums his lyrical voice has remained relatively steady.
His follow-ups, including a startling album of pre-debut auditions, The Trailer Tapes, have stuck to a similar format of rootsy guitar-based productions backing unblinking chronicles of blue collar America. Knight's characters carry forward the disappointments and failures of broken childhoods, escaping from dysfunctional relationships but unable to erase their scars. He sings of a coal miner's flight from his ancestral home, counting on the belief that "hope runs a straight line down this mountain road" to the ocean. What's impressive is the wealth of characters and stories he continues to dig up and render in such palpable, three-dimensional emotions. Having found himself artistically on 2001's A Pretty Good Guy singer-songwriter Chris Knight shook off the major label production of his 1998 self-titled debut and wallowed in his dark visions of rural life.
Earle's protagonists sense there's something better but don't know what, while Knight's are taunted by better lives that remain out of reach.Knight opens the disc as a touring musician whose road-warrior fortitude has become a callus ("I ain't home `til I leave you behind") and on "Hell Ain't Half Full" he's a hell-bound meth dealer who thinks God's given up. It's a perfect setting for Knight as the tempos match the relentless extinction of hope in his characters.
I can only imagine where he get's the ideas for the stories in his songs. I had the opportunity to meet Mr. This music is well written and well played as one can always expect from one of Knight's albums. Dan Baird's production adds a nice little kick in the pants. Knight at the Lazy River Festival in Illinois this last summer and found him to be a real down to earth type of guy.
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