Jim Stringer & The AM Band

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Special Delivery Stomp 00:00 Tools
I Feel Better (Since You're Go 00:00 Tools
Sick, Sober and Sorry 00:00 Tools
In My Hand 00:00 Tools
Here's The River 00:00 Tools
Sweet November 00:00 Tools
I Wanna Be In Your Dreams 00:00 Tools
We Took The Long Way 00:00 Tools
The Right Direction 00:00 Tools
Come a Little Closer 00:00 Tools
Bye-Bye, Bayou 00:00 Tools
Looking for Romeo 00:00 Tools
What Do I Know? 00:00 Tools
Jack, You're Dead 00:00 Tools
Can't Hold Me Back 00:00 Tools
Thirty Days 00:00 Tools
I Feel Better (Since You're Gone) 00:00 Tools
Long Time Coming 00:00 Tools
Fools Fall in Love 00:00 Tools
Sugarfootin' 00:00 Tools
Leave My Woman Alone 00:00 Tools
Easy to Love (Hard to Trust) 00:00 Tools
Onward, Charlie Christian's Soldiers 00:00 Tools
A Man Who Can't Say No 00:00 Tools
Ninety Miles Per Hour 00:00 Tools
My Baby Left Me 00:00 Tools
36-22-36 00:00 Tools
Cold Uneasy Blues 00:00 Tools
Raised on Robbery 00:00 Tools
That's All I Need 00:00 Tools
I Remember You 00:00 Tools
We Ran Out of Love, Baby Blue 00:00 Tools
Long Black Limousine 00:00 Tools
Don't Tell Me Goodbye 00:00 Tools
Texas and Pacific 00:00 Tools
Cedar Fever 00:00 Tools
Dance Like a Child 00:00 Tools
Bye-bye Bayou 00:00 Tools
No Love Have I 00:00 Tools
Tag Along 00:00 Tools
Three Wishes 00:00 Tools
Earthquake 00:00 Tools
That´s Allright With Me 00:00 Tools
I'll Give You Miles 00:00 Tools
Little Longhorn Polka 00:00 Tools
Any Way You Want Me 00:00 Tools
The Smartest Man Alive 00:00 Tools
Pink Tornado 00:00 Tools
That's Allright With Me 00:00 Tools
Could We Walk Away? 00:00 Tools
Easy to Love 00:00 Tools
I Feel Better 00:00 Tools
  • 2,302
    plays
  • 440
    listners
  • 2302
    top track count

At Jim Stringer's first gig in 1960, he performed Duane Eddy's "Rebel Rouser". The years have polished his guitar style, and broadened his musical vocabulary, but the roots are still present and powerful. In fact, “Rebel Rouser” is the opening track of his new CD, “Triskaidekaphilia” (love of the number thirteen). Embedded in the performance are references to thirteen artists/songs that have contributed to his musical education. “Triskaidekaphilia” is a commemoration of Stringer’s sixty years on the planet, and pays homage to the music, the people, the life and loves that have pioneered, shared and followed his path. The music cuts a wide stylistic swath, something which has become expected in Stringer’s CDs. There’s the celebratory rockabilly of “Here’s the River”, written in remembrance of Stringer’s father. “Chevy Headed West”, a poignant memoir of a pair of late 60’s twenty year olds on the day of the Robert Kennedy assassination, would have fit neatly into Johnny Cash’s repertoire. Stringer’s early Hootenanny performances are recalled in “The Right Direction”, which incidentally, reveals the secret to enlightenment. The dark country waltz (emphasis on DARK), “I Saw Them Together”, is a miniature episode of “Law & Order”. A country shuffle, a few two-beats, and a blazing instrumental tribute to Hank Garland complete the thirteen track program. One reviewer called Stringer’s previous CD, “In My Hand”, “...a 38 minute clinic on how to write, perform, and engineer a real country CD.” If that is so, then “Triskaidekaphilia” may well be the graduate level course. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.