Takes me home
R. Kyle | USA | 07/06/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I first heard Joe Ely with the Flatlanders on KGSR in Austin, TX. His voice is one you won't forget and his glittering flamenco guitar can send chills down your spine. I'd liken him to Texas' Springsteen as far as his composing talents are concerned.
The other reviewers are right when they say that Ely's better live. No artifact comes close to capturing his humor and energy and yet this CD is as close as anything. The cover art on this CD is superlative.
While Ely's rooted in Country and Tejano, he's got some solid rock backing too. Bruce Springsteen sings backup on "All Just to Get to You."
"All Just to Get to You" got the most airplay in Austin at the time of the CD's release, but so much of this CD is timeless. "Letter to Laredo" could stand with "Town of El Paso" and many of the classic outlaw greats. The urgency of the message runs clear through the music and literally makes my heart pound.
And this is definitely real Texas music. Who else but Joe Ely could get me to listen to a song about cockfighting? Like it or not (and I really don't), cockfighting is a part of the Tex-Mex culture, and the song tells a story of a man who steals a prize rooster to gamble:
Hola my Teresa I'm thinkin of you now in San Antonio
I have 27 dollars and the good luck of your good luck of your picture framed in gold
Tonight I'll put it all on the fighting spurs of Gallo Del Cielo
Then I'll return to buy the land Pancho Villa stole from father long ago
Ely takes you to that moonlit fight and you find yourself rooting for the thief and his rooster. Totally unexpected, but that's the kind of magic that Ely can weave."
Beware Universal Special Markets Version!
Derek Sheplawy | Vancouver, BC | 12/04/2009
(1 out of 5 stars)
"Fantastic album, maybe Joe's best, and that is saying something, but beware the 2007 version that Universal Special Markets have released! The original multi-paged booklet, printed on nice paper stock, has been replaced by a single sheet tray card that is pretty much void of any relevant information pertaining to 'Letter To Laredo'. Hooray to the modern day marketing genius! I suggest seeking out an original used copy of the 1995 edition and enjoy this album as it was intended to be, with full artwork, lyrics and the mention of the guest appearances. Or you might as well download it, you ain't getting it as it was intended to be released anyways."