Ed Burleson

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Goin' Home To Texas 00:00 Tools
Dead Skunk 03:43 Tools
No Closing Time 00:00 Tools
Northeast Texas Women 00:00 Tools
Honky-Tonk Heart 00:00 Tools
All Bucked Up 00:00 Tools
Wide Open Spaces 00:00 Tools
The Cold Hard Truth 00:00 Tools
Clinging To You 00:00 Tools
Long Distance Love 00:00 Tools
Ramble On 00:00 Tools
Loneliness 00:00 Tools
Dreamworld 00:00 Tools
Staring Out the Window 00:00 Tools
Going Home to Texas 03:11 Tools
Might Seem Like A Loser 00:00 Tools
No Tears 00:00 Tools
My Perfect World 00:00 Tools
Tell Me Why 00:00 Tools
The Way You've Been Treating Me 00:00 Tools
The Can 00:00 Tools
I Can't Help Myself 00:00 Tools
Sneakin' Suspicion 00:00 Tools
Big Town, Small World Blues 00:00 Tools
If You Wanna Go (Just Go) 00:00 Tools
It All Started and Ended With You 00:00 Tools
Heart Break Highway 00:00 Tools
Heart Break Highway (Intro) 00:00 Tools
Get It Out! 00:00 Tools
No One Has to Tell You 00:00 Tools
Heart Break 00:00 Tools
Get it Out 00:00 Tools
If You Wanna Go - Just Go 00:00 Tools
If You Wanna Go 00:00 Tools
Northeast Texas Woman 00:00 Tools
11 Months & 29 Days 00:00 Tools
11 Months and 29 Days 00:00 Tools
No Closin' Time 00:00 Tools
  • 13,410
    plays
  • 2,374
    listners
  • 13410
    top track count

You don’t come by an album title like "The Cold Hard Truth" without suffering through some ugly experiences, and like anyone else, Ed Burleson has had his share. But in the best country tradition, this Denison, Texas, native throws those hard knocks into his music and learns from them in life. The title of his new release may seem like an ironic follow-up to 1999’s My Perfect World, but consider that between the two, Burleson lost his mentor, manager and producer, the legendary Doug Sahm, and his label, Sahm’s Tornado Records. That killed his career momentum despite Perfect World’s climb to No. 3 on radio trade magazine Gavin’s Americana chart. His divorce was just one more knockout punch. But Burleson, a former rodeo rider, picked himself up, dusted off, and jumped back in the saddle. He poured his honky-tonk heart into making Truth, which Palo Duro Records released April 27, 2004. This collection of 14 mostly self-penned songs is the product of that determination, but Burleson made sure to acknowledge the late Texas Tornado’s personal and professional friendship. His homage comes via Sahm’s own voice, which is heard in the intro to the previously recorded song, “Heart Break Highway.” What attracted Sahm was Burleson’s reverence for traditional bluegrass and honky-tonk, delivered with a distinctive nasal twang and not one note of insincerity. Chet Flippo commented in Billboard magazine that Burleson’s music is “the purest-sounding country I’ve heard in a long time.” Other journalists have lauded him for being, in the words of the Dallas Observer’s Rob Patterson, “too country for Nashville, but not for Texas.” Burleson’s Texas bloodline goes back as far as his name: Bennett Edward Burleson IV. Born in 1969, he grew up in a music-loving family that moved frequently because of his dad’s sales career. They landed in Lewisville, where Ed joined his high school rodeo team — a choice that led directly to his music career. In college on a bronco-bucking scholarship, Burleson traded some riding tack for a guitar. After graduation, he moved to Dallas and joined the professional rodeo circuit, but got lassoed by a knee injury. Recovering gave him enough free time (or boredom) to get serious about music. He decided to leave the cowboy life to follow another kind of Texas tradition as a country singer/songwriter. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.