Adam Carroll

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Ol' Milwaukee's Best 00:00 Tools
Girl With the Dirty Hair 00:00 Tools
Home Again 00:00 Tools
Red Bandanna Blues 00:00 Tools
Amanda's Song 00:00 Tools
Cole 00:00 Tools
Oklahoma Gypsy Shuffler 00:00 Tools
Race Car Joe 00:00 Tools
Errol's Song 00:00 Tools
Alright 00:00 Tools
Karaoke Cowboy 00:00 Tools
Rice Birds 00:00 Tools
Cane River Blues 00:00 Tools
Blondie and Dagwood 00:00 Tools
Screen Door 00:00 Tools
Hi Fi Love 00:00 Tools
South of Town 00:00 Tools
Legs 00:00 Tools
Rosemary's Song 00:00 Tools
Hunter's Song 00:00 Tools
Silver Lakeside 00:00 Tools
Bubble Gum 00:00 Tools
Sno Cone Man 00:00 Tools
Hi-Fi Love 00:00 Tools
Ricebirds 00:00 Tools
Black Flag Blues 00:00 Tools
Stranger's Advice 00:00 Tools
Love Song For My Family 00:00 Tools
Pokin' Round In The Ashes 00:00 Tools
Full Moon Shining Down 00:00 Tools
Smoky Mountain Taxi 00:00 Tools
Teardrops 00:00 Tools
Far Away Blues 00:00 Tools
Dream On 00:00 Tools
Picture Show 00:00 Tools
Sacred Love 00:00 Tools
Household Name 00:00 Tools
Low In The Mountains 00:00 Tools
Fortune Teller Eyes 00:00 Tools
Old Town Rock N Roll 00:00 Tools
Highway Prayer 00:00 Tools
Lacy 00:00 Tools
Old Child Country Star 00:00 Tools
All The Way 00:00 Tools
Bernadine (feat. Chris Carroll) 00:00 Tools
Tears in My Gumbo 00:00 Tools
Rain 00:00 Tools
AFL CIO 00:00 Tools
Last Day Of Grace 00:00 Tools
Raining 00:00 Tools
Rough Side 00:00 Tools
Peace On Earth 00:00 Tools
Rigged Game 00:00 Tools
Wrote it for You 00:00 Tools
Good Behavior 00:00 Tools
Afl-Cio 00:00 Tools
Sno-Cone Man 00:00 Tools
Porter Wagner (Aka the Silvertone Song) 00:00 Tools
Let Me Go 00:00 Tools
Billy Gibbons' Beard 00:00 Tools
Lil Runaway 00:00 Tools
Bernadine 00:00 Tools
Walked in Them Shoes 00:00 Tools
Elvis 00:00 Tools
Snow Cone Man 00:00 Tools
The Last Word 00:00 Tools
Caroline 00:00 Tools
Spoken For (feat. Chris Carroll) 00:00 Tools
Blondie 00:00 Tools
Smokey Mountain Taxi 00:00 Tools
My Only Good Shirt 00:00 Tools
Adam Carroll - Rice Birds 00:00 Tools
Rough Side Accordion 00:00 Tools
Spoken For 00:00 Tools
Storms 00:00 Tools
Buble Gum 00:00 Tools
Rough Side Accordian 00:00 Tools
Crescent City Angels 00:00 Tools
Iris and the Lonesome Stranger 00:00 Tools
Black Flag Blues - Feat. Scott Nolan 00:00 Tools
This Old Garage 00:00 Tools
Cordelia 00:00 Tools
Pokin' Round in the Ashes 00:00 Tools
Care River Blues 00:00 Tools
Night At The Show 00:00 Tools
Lil' Runaway 00:00 Tools
Porter Wagon (AKA The Silvertone Song) 00:00 Tools
Adam Carroll - Teardrops 00:00 Tools
Christmas Greeting 1925 00:00 Tools
Grandmother's Christmas 1927 00:00 Tools
Black Flag Blues (feat. Scott Nolan) 00:00 Tools
Bubblegum 00:00 Tools
Christmas Greetings 1929 00:00 Tools
Be Nice To 'Em Son 00:00 Tools
Old Town Rock 'n' Roll 00:00 Tools
Erroll's Song 00:00 Tools
Black Flag Blues- Live 00:00 Tools
Porter Wagoner (AKA The Silvertone Song) 00:00 Tools
ALF-CIO 00:00 Tools
Doin' the Raccoon 00:00 Tools
There's a Small Hotel 00:00 Tools
Pokin' Around the Ashes 00:00 Tools
Racecar Joe 00:00 Tools
Tea for Two 00:00 Tools
Old Town Rock n Roll (featuring Scott Nolan) 00:00 Tools
The Girl with the Dirty Hair 00:00 Tools
Old Milwaukee's Best 00:00 Tools
Gulf Coast Losers 00:00 Tools
New Years Eve 00:00 Tools
Tired Of Myself 00:00 Tools
Track 2 Oklahoma Gypsy Shuffler 00:00 Tools
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Adam Carroll was born and raised in Texas, a state that has produced more than a few singer/songwriters with an uncanny ability to read the souls and touch the hearts of their listeners. With Far Away Blues, his debut album for Blue Corn Music, Adam Carroll joins the short list of down- home storytellers able to take the everyday events of ordinary lives and turn them into deeply moving, and often quite humorous, songs. Far Away Blues is more introspective, and more cohesive than his previous albums, but it has the same melodic invention and commanding poetic voice that earned South of Town and Lookin' Out the Screen Door nationwide rave reviews (see enclosed press sheet) and considerable airplay. Carroll is already a major artist in Texas; Far Away Blues is sure to take that buzz nationwide. Far Away Blues, like Carroll's other studio albums, was produced by Lloyd Maines, a man known for his ability to create an intimate studio atmosphere. The album projects the warmth of a living room get together; down to the brief spoken introductions Carroll gives to each song. "I usually mention the title of each tune before I play it. Lloyd suggested leaving the intros in, to get the home made feel we were aiming for. "My first two albums were just collections of songs I'd written," Carroll explained. "So to challenge myself, I started thinking about the direction I wanted to go, musically and lyrically, before I started writing. There was a lot of music in my family. My granddad played sax for Gene Krupa, before he became the Choir Director at a Methodist church in Texas. We would sit down together and listen to Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. Lloyd suggested writing a tune my Granddad could play on. That got me thinking about the way my family connected through music, and the way music connects us all. I started thinking about writing songs that were interconnected, without actually making it a concept album." The album includes a guest appearance by Ray Wylie Hubbard on "Last Day Of Grace," a tune he co-wrote with Carroll as well as backing vocals from Terri Hendrix. Carroll cut the basic tracks - guitar, harmonica and voice - most in one take, aiming for a live concert feel. Then Maines brought in session players to lay down rhythm tracks and add strings, horns (including Ray Davidson, Carroll's grandfather on sax) and pedal steel, Maines' specialty. "Low in the Mountains (High in the Pines)" is a laid-back bluegrass tune that features some fancy picking by Lloyd Maines on mandolin and a variety of guitars. "There are little pockets of bluegrass players scattered around East Texas," Carroll said. "I wanted to pay tribute to their music and the memories I have of them. "Teardrops," is a melancholy love song with Carroll on piano, backed by a swooning string quartet. "Richard Bowden added the fiddles and cello. I never thought I'd have anything that sounded classical on an album of mine, so it was quite a surprise." Musically, the title track sounds like an old time Appalachian mountain ballad, but in two neat verses it explains the difference between family vacations before and after a young man is aware of girls. The album closes with two songs of redemption and resurrection. "Last Day Of Grace," Carroll's duet with Ray Wylie Hubbard, is a stirring Southern Gospel tune that holds out a glimmer of hope to those afflicted by life's hardships. "Peace on Earth" is a prayer for confused lovers, missing soldiers and other lost souls set to a funereal Irish tune, another echo of family and musical ties that go back generations in time. Ray Davidson plays a closing solo that brings to mind the drone of Scotch and Irish pipers. Far Away Blues nudges Carroll's sound in new directions, but the focus remains on Carroll's songwriting and his warm, easygoing vocals. Even when he's dealing with heartache and hardship, Carroll's basic goodness and generosity of spirit come shining though. Far Away Blues is an album that will grow on you, revealing new levels of insight and musicianship every time you listen. Adam Carroll grew up in Tyler, Texas. He is a fan of classic rock and toyed with playing electric guitar, but when he picked up an acoustic at the age of 18 his course was set. "I got a feeling from the acoustic I never got from the electric guitar. And seeing Joe Ely, Guy Clark and Robert Earl Keen live really empowered me. They're approachable in a way that some musicians aren't. I was also blown away Terry Allen's Lubbock on Everything. It showed me that songs could be really weird and really funny, but still be true." In Junior College, Carroll began paying attention to the way words and music were put together and decided on a songwriting career. "The core of what I do is songwriting; it's the one thing I'm passionate about. It's the most fulfilling and challenging job I can imagine." Carroll began playing gigs and built up a solid fan base almost overnight. Relentless touring throughout Texas and the Southwest laid the foundation for his 1998 debut, South Of Town, produced by Lloyd Maines. The album added to Carroll's growing reputation, as did his first appearance at SXSW. The Austin Chronicle's Michael Beryin hailed Carroll as "75% John Prine and one quarter Townes Van Zandt.he has the rare ability to do silly without being corny." "Life can be screwed up," Carroll explained. "And while I'm not a zippity do dah kind of guy, when I write a song, there's always a kind of redemption in it. I don't know if I have a brighter outlook than anybody else - I get driven crazy by some stuff - but laughing, even when things aren't really funny, keeps me going." At the Austin Music awards that year Carroll won Top Ten mentions for Best Songwriter, Best Singer/Songwriter and Best Folk Artist. "Adam Carroll's Down Home Song Swaps," held at various venues around the state, added more fans and built up a sense of community among fellow songwriters. "I was trying to get my name out there, so I started hosting in-the-round sows with my songwriter friends. There are so many good writers out there; it gave us a chance to support each other." Album #2 Lookin' Out the Screen Door, again produced by Maines, produced another flurry of rave reviews and led to better gigs, including a knock out debut performance at Nashville's legendary songwriter café, The Bluebird Lounge. Far Away Blues is the next step on a journey guaranteed to add another Texan to the pantheon of great singer/songwriters. Adam Carroll will be touring heavily to support Far Away Blues. For more information, CDs, press kits, photos and interviews please contact Vickie Lucero at the Propaganda Group at 512.268.3048 or by email at prop1@austin.rr.com. Www.propagandamediagroup.com www.adamcarroll.com www.bluecornmusic.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.