Search - Ray Wylie Hubbard :: Delirium Tremolos

Delirium Tremolos
Ray Wylie Hubbard
Delirium Tremolos
Genres: Country, Folk, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Texas troubadour Ray Wylie Hubbard offers originals and interpretations of writers such as Eliza Gilkyson, Roger Tillison, James McMurtry, Woody Guthrie and Slaid Cleaves. Out of many voices, he's crafted an album uniquely...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Ray Wylie Hubbard
Title: Delirium Tremolos
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Philo / Umgd
Release Date: 1/25/2005
Genres: Country, Folk, Pop, Rock
Styles: Americana, Outlaw Country, Classic Country, Traditional Folk, Singer-Songwriters, Country Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 011671124421

Synopsis

Album Description
Texas troubadour Ray Wylie Hubbard offers originals and interpretations of writers such as Eliza Gilkyson, Roger Tillison, James McMurtry, Woody Guthrie and Slaid Cleaves. Out of many voices, he's crafted an album uniquely his own. Tearing down the road, fending off sin or welcoming it into the living room, shaking off the blues and seeking salvation wherever he can find it, Hubbard understands what he calls "the head of the rock 'n' roll gypsies," and no matter who wrote the tale, he knows how to bring it to life with a deep-focus emotional honesty that hits the heart dead center.

Similarly Requested CDs

 

CD Reviews

His music has a gruff side, but that is its ballsy charm
J. Ross | Roseburg, OR USA | 03/02/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Playing Time - 45:35 -- Ray Wylie Hubbard may be best known as the composer of "Up Against the Wall, Redneck Mother," and he also wrote "Wanna Rock `n Roll," Cross Canadian Ragweed's party anthem. On his "Delirium Tremolos" album, the Texas singer/songwriter with the strong, growling baritone primarily interprets songs of Eliza Gilkyson, Roger Tillison, James McMurty, Slaid Cleaves and others. Three originals from his own pen are also offered. "Dallas After Midnight," originally recorded about 20 years ago with the Lost Gonzo Band, is a hard-hitting tale of a liquor store robbery gone wrong with all its social commentary. Jack Ingram sings with Ray Wylie on this number. Another Hubbard ballad, "Dust of the Chase" relates the story of a scripture-reading gambling man who is "lost in the dust of the chase" that his life brings. Written with Cody Canada, "Cooler-n-Hell" is straight-ahead blues that speaks to those things under heaven which are cooler-n-hell.



When choosing covers, Hubbard shows an affinity for meaningful songs that are both funny and serious. His socially conscious messages have built him plenty of fans in the alt-country crowd. Back in 70s, Hubbard and his Cowboy Twinkies band had a very short fling with Warner Brothers. Some additional albums followed during the 80s. The decade of the 90s found him cleaned up after 25 years of drugs and alcohol and with some top Americana releases such as "Eternal and Lowdown" and "Growl." At age 43, Hubbard also took his first guitar lesson, learned to fingerpick and actually began to study songwriting. On the road, he carries an inspirational book entitled "Letters to a Young Poet" by Rainier Maria Rilke.



"Delirium Tremolos" features some material which is a very good fit for Ray Wylie, chosen with the help of producer Gurf Morlix. The project opens with "The Beauty Way," written by Eliza Gilkyson and Mark Andes about Gilkyson's father, Terry, who wrote a number of big hits. Gilkyson sings with Hubbard on this cut, as well as with four others on "This Mornin' I Am Born Again" presented a cappella with only percussion.



The album closes with a personal interpretation of James McMurtry's "Choctaw Bingo," an 8-minute party trip to a family reunion in Oklahoma. The song paints impressionistic pictures of some characters like Uncle Slaton who makes moonshine and cooks crystal meth. We're gonna have us a time with Roscoe, Bob, Mae, Ruth-Anne, and Lynn. Especially the last two I reckon, as Ray Wylie sings, "And they're second cousins to me, Man I don't care I wanna get between `em, with a great big ol' hard-on, like a old bois d'arc fencepost..." Other guest singers on "Delirium Tremolos" include Jack Ingram, Patty Griffin, Kimmie Rhodes, Bob Schneider and Slaid Cleaves. Musicians include Ray Bonneville (harmonica), Rick Richards and Jon Hahn (drums), Cody Canada (electric guitar), Ian McLagan (Hammond B3 organ), and Gurf Morlix (bass, guitars, percussion, steel, mandolin).



On a personal side, Hubbard leads a more conservative life than some of the eccentric people he sings about. He's married (Judy), has a son (Lucas), attends Lucas' baseball and basketball games, and hosts a Tuesday folk and blues radio show (KNBT in Gruene, Tx.). He also plans to tour, write songs, and re-release some of his earliest work in the near future. The music has a gruff side, but that is its ballsy charm. Ray Wylie Hubbard's expressive musicality continues to build a large following, albeit not with that many audiences of mainstream country music. (Joe Ross)

"
A Fine Release From One of Texas' Holy Songwriting Trinity
Kurt Harding | Boerne TX | 03/29/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Texas seems to produce an awful lot of singer-songwriter story telling types, and Ray Wylie Hubbard ranks right up there with Robert Earl Keen Jr and James McMurtry as one of the best.

I am not originally from Texas, but I have been aware of Hubbard's songwriting genius since Jerry Jeff Walker introduced him to the wider world back in the mid-70s with a cover of the riotous Redneck Mother. Since that time, I have been an occasional fan, picking up a Hubbard CD here and there as I became aware of a new release.

Delirium Tremolos is no different. A friend who is a regular buyer of Hubbard recordings alerted me to this about a month ago and told me how much he enjoyed it, so I gave it a shot.

As you might already know from the industry blurb or from other sources, this is a collection of mostly cover songs written by somewhat obscure songwriters, some of whom are unfamiliar to me. That's OK, I like to find hidden treasures, and there are a lot to discover on Delirium Tremolos.

My favorites are Eliza Gilkyson's The Beauty Way, Roger Tillison's Rock and Roll Gypsies, Gurf Morlix's Torn In Two, the Hubbard/Canada joint composition Cooler-N-Hell, and James McMurtry's epic Choctaw Bingo. That last I like specially because of its wry humor and because I know all the places mentioned in the song. Though I'd yet to hear McMurtry sing Choctaw Bingo himself, the way it is written has McMurtry all over it. To add to the listener's enjoyment, Hubbard brings in McMurtry to play guitar on this rendition.

I also like Dust of the Chase, though it took me a while to warm to the version here. The original is on Loco Gringo's Lament, and in my opinion, is the best song Hubbard has ever written!

If you are into alt-country outlaw type music, you are sure to like Delirium Tremolos whether or not you have heard Hubbard before. Give it a shot, you can't go wrong."
A rock and roll gypsies' masterpiece
Smallchief | 01/27/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Ray Wylie Hubbard's "Delirium Tremolos" is the best CD I've heard in a month of Sundays. The craggy old Texas singer/songwriter mostly sings songs by other people, backed up by fabulous guitar work and female singers on some tracks who counterpoint Hubbard's growl with a bit of sweetness.



I suppose you would call RWH's style alt.country. His formula is to sing songs with interesting --sometimes deep, sometimes humorous, always surprising -- lyrics, backed up by heavy duty guitar work and little quirky touches such as a harmonica or a gospel organ that breaks in now and then. Maybe he's more like Lucinda Williams than any other artist -- although Hubbard seems to me to have a broader range of interests.



"Driving Wheel" is perhaps the most melodious song on the CD with a killer steel guitar wailing in the background and Patty Griffin adding her voice to the choruses. "Dust of the Chase" features an eerie harmonica weaving in and out of the vocal. "Choctaw Bingo" is eight minutes of hypnotic chanting and heavy, heavy guitar. All the other songs are equally interesting.



At first listen, this sounds like a CD that will be an all-time favorite of mine.



Smallchief"