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Burned and Buried
 
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Burned and Buried

Two Dollar Guitar
3.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews) More about this product

List Price: $14.98
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Customers buy this album with Train Songs ~ Two Dollar Guitar

Burned and Buried Train Songs
Price For Both: $29.96

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (March 1, 1996)
  • Original Release Date: March 1, 1996
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Smells Like Records
  • ASIN: B0000030KM
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #456,518 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Track Listings

1. Burned And Barried
2. Song For A Dead Friend
3. Happy Guitar
4. Let Me Bring You Down
5. Speed
6. Path Train Blues
7. Guilt
8. Canny
9. The Impromptu Ballad Of A Male Slut
10. TV
11. Black Star
12. Dutch
13. Bring On The Rain

Editorial Reviews

From the Label
Two Dollar Guitar began in 1992 when Tim Foljahn landed in Hoboken, NJ after several years spent nomadding about the country, absorbing the cultures of a vivid cross-section of American turfs: New Orleans, Albuquerque, Chicago. Armed with a book full of damned, heavy soul-ballads inspired by both his psycho-spritual and actual physical travels, he recruited his friend Steve Shelley to help animate them for public consumption. The music mines a sound and vision based on 'roots' music in the truest sense of the word, building on a tradition found in the work of fellow twisted classicists from Nick Cave to Gene Clark, Credence Clearwater Revival to Lee Hazlewood and Leonard Cohen, and transubstantiating these influences into something utterly their own.

The debut single, a skeletal unrosined violinscrape and harrowing autobiog called "Lost Bird", was a mostly-solo affair by Tim, with Steve percussing and producing. The first full length, "Let Me Bring You Down", is a record crammed with squinty biblical allegory, more autobiog and tales of broken noses, buired babies and pu@*#-whipped philosophers. Around this same time, Tim and Steve were becoming a sort of an indie-rock Sly-and-Robbie for hire, rhythm sectioning in groups like Mosquito (with Jad Fair), Male Slut (with Thurston Moore) and Cat Power (with Chan Marshall). Most fateful, however, was the trio's aborted collaboration with the late, great Texan singer/songwri