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Father Time

Father Time

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Artist: Hal Ketchum
Label: Curb Records
Category: Music

List Price: $18.98
Buy New: $13.54
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 21060

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.3

MPN: 79109
UPC: 715187910928
EAN: 0715187910928
ASIN: B001CSPHNY

Release Date: September 9, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed items direct from the Studios. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 10
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5 out of 5 stars Hal about not waiting so long between CD's   October 7, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I love Hal....have since the first time I saw/heard him on CMT in 1990. He has such a distinct voice that is so refreshing since most of the radio singers sound the same. This CD is definitely more "soulful" than others, and that is not usually the type of music I listen to, but he makes them sound fabulous. My favorite Hal songs are "Past the Point of Rescue", "Stay Forever", "Satisfied Mind". The songs on this CD don't have the same feel, but his voice and musical ability is absolutely AMAZING!!!!
You can't go wrong with anything Hal Ketchum!!!



5 out of 5 stars HAL KETCHUM--OUR NATIONAL TREASURE   October 6, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

As always, Hal Ketchum delivers a collection of songs with melodies and lyrics that truly "stay forever" in the mind of this listener, an admitted Hal Ketchum fan since the early '90s. Having had the opportunity to see Hal perform several of these new songs in January of this year at the Crazy Horse in West Covina, CA, the CD delivers equally stirring performances. There is not a single song on this CD that I would consider less than a "five star" effort--from the heart-string tugging "Ordinary Day" and "The Day He Called Your Name" to the absolutely hilarious "Continental Farewell" (be sure to read the liner notes on this song). What was an absolute surprise was the inclusion of "Millionaire's Wife"--a tune that I had not heard Hal perform in several years; I guarantee it will stick in your head and you'll find yourself singing the melody, "She has a house and a big, black Lincoln" for days to come. Yes, Hal Ketchum is indeed a national treasure!!!


5 out of 5 stars Top Notch   October 6, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Loved it! One of his best and I saw him live recently and he performed four of the songs, wow! A definite purchase if you are a Hal fan and if you aren't you will be now!


5 out of 5 stars Hal Ketchum has really set the bar for everybody .   September 23, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

There is nothing quite like seeing Hal Ketchum in person. This is another CD I will have to call a favorite and I have only listened to it once. Hal Ketchum is what I believe to be " America's voice " in the Country Music arena.

Thanks Hal and I look forward to seeing you when you visit the Northwest ( soon I hope ). I was so so pleased with the release of " Millionare's Wife "

Mike and Maureen Foreman
Portland , Oregon



4 out of 5 stars +1/2 Soulful live-to-tape studio album from country hitmaker   September 9, 2008
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

Ketchum's been a country hitmaker since the early '90s, with consistently interesting albums that have often shaded to the smoother, adult-contemporary side of Nashville's output. In 1998 he split the sessions for I Saw The Light between Nashville and Austin, employing a more rustic choice of material and arrangements for the latter. The resulting album wasn't as cohesive as his earlier releases, but taking the sessions individually one finds Ketchum standing authoritatively in both worlds. More importantly, the alternatives to Nashville's way would again be exercised the following year with the electric blues "Long Way Down" and the Zydeco-inspired "You Love Me, Love Me Not." Ketchum continued to revert to pop-influenced country, but he also wailed on a Bo Diddley beat for 2003's "The King of Love," found a soulful vocal gear for "On Her Own Time," and championed the common man on the shuffle blues "The Carpenter's Way."

Ketchum's last album, the 2007 release One More Midnight, was released in Europe but not the U.S., making this CD his first domestic issue in five years. In addition to some fine new songs (most newly written, a few selected from Ketchum's catalog of previously unreleased works) and superb vocal performances, the presence of this live-in-the-studio recording is ear opening. Ketchum and his engineer (Craig White) capture the sort of intimate sound one used to expect from vinyl half-speed masters and direct-to-disc pressings. The purpose-built band, featuring Bryan Sutton, Darrell Scott, Eddie Bayers, Chip Davis and other A-listers, responds to the live challenge with performances miles beyond the baffle-separated, multi-track chart readings of modern recording. And it all took two days, no overdubs and only a few second takes.

From the opening track you can hear Ketchum roughing up the polish of Nashville's manicure as his first-person narrative explores the human estrangement and philosophical implications of a panhandler's hopelessness. A soulful backing chorus provides a taste of Muscle Shoals, but it's Ketchum's pained, emotional vocal that brings the song's protagonist to life. He manages the same feat on "Ordinary Day," crossing genders to voice the tired-but-satisfied voice of a waitress, and on "Sparrow" he laments the cost of war from the perspective of a Civil War soldier. More fantastically, the jazzy bluegrass and cooking Southern funk of "Millionaire's Wife" backs a steamy noir-styled tale of cheating and betrayal, ending with the imprisoned mark's death sentence: "She got a house and a long black Lincoln / I got a ticket straight to hell." Think of Body Heat or The Postman Always Rings Twice as told by a poor sap on death row. A swampier second-line rhythm can be heard on the kiss-off "If You Don't Love Me Baby (Just Let Me Go)," and the band fires up gypsy jazz sounds with Bryon Sutton's fleet-fingered acoustic guitar playing on "Million Dollar Baby."

Ketchum frequently writes about family, including a loping Marty Robbins-styled waltz, "Yesterday's Gone," that profiles his grandfathers' decline upon the passing of their spouses, and the poor-but-rich nostalgia of "Surrounded by Love." His great-grandmother's passing provided the inspiration for the moody "The Day He Called Your Name," and the album's only cover, Tom Waits' "Jersey Girl" is sung as a soulful fiddle-and-steel country love song for his Jersey-born wife. Closer to home, "Down Along the Guadalupe" paints an inviting picture of a summer evening on Texas' Guadalupe river, with Spanish-tinged guitars providing fittingly lazy accompaniment. As noted earlier, Ketchum's always been a consistent album artist, but freed to record as a musician (rather than a studio artist) he's delivered a CD whose lack of production artifice inspires a level of artistry and soulfulness well beyond his middle-of-the-road hits. 4-1/2 stars, if allowed fractional ratings. [2008 hyperbolium dot com]


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