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Life and Death (And Almost Everything Else).

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Download links and information about Life and Death (And Almost Everything Else). by Jack Blanchard & Misty Morgan. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Country genres. It contains 29 tracks with total duration of 01:15:52 minutes.

Artist: Jack Blanchard & Misty Morgan
Release date: 2005
Genre: Country
Tracks: 29
Duration: 01:15:52
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Tennessee Bird Walk 2:51
2. Big Black Bird (Spirit of My Love) 2:37
3. Chapel Hill 2:38
4. The Dum Song 2:24
5. Bethlehem Steel 2:32
6. Poor Jody 2:37
7. Humphrey the Camel 2:58
8. Yellow Bellied Sapsucker 2:37
9. Changin' Times 3:23
10. The Clock of St. James 2:06
11. You've Got Your Troubles (I've Got Mine) 2:43
12. A Place In My Mind 2:26
13. The Autumn Song (On a Yellow Day) 1:54
14. How I Lost 31 Pounds In 17 Days 3:05
15. Somewhere In Virginia In the Rain 2:38
16. The Shadows of the Leaves 2:37
17. There Must Be More to Life (Than Growing Old) 2:32
18. The Legendary Chicken Fairy 2:17
19. Miami Sidewalks 2:32
20. Fire Hydrant #79 2:39
21. Don't It Make You Wanta Go Home 2:30
22. If Eggs Had Legs 2:43
23. Second Tuesday In December 2:52
24. A Handful of Dimes 2:08
25. It Seems LIke There Ain't No Going Home 2:56
26. I'm Washin' Harry Down the Sink 3:06
27. The Night We Heard the Voice 2:18
28. Lonesome Song 2:24
29. The Sunset Train 2:49

Details

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Jack Blanchard & Misty Morgan have been compared to "Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood...on acid," a comparison that has been stickered to the front of the Omni Recording Corporation's 2005 compilation Life and Death (And Almost Everything Else). It's not an inaccurate comparison per se, but it kind of ignores the fact that Nancy & Lee already sounded like they were on acid, particularly on such hazy, narcotic fantasias as "Some Velvet Morning." Jack & Misty sound like they're on acid, but only according to kitsch fanatics who've never tripped and have only drowned themselves in pop culture ephemera: it's like a parody of the '60s of Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, kind of like an Austin Powers movie. It's an oddity, and it's sometimes funny, but it's also silly and trying, wearing out its welcome long before its 29 tracks finish. Contrary to the impression given from the song titles — "The Legendary Chicken Fairy," "If Eggs Had Legs," "I'm Washin' Harry Down the Sink," etc. — this music doesn't feel intentionally humorous, yet it also doesn't quite feel formed; songs bear a germ of an interesting idea, but not much more. So, this winds up being music that camp cultists force themselves to embrace, as it has the appearance of being everything they love, yet they'll find that this is the kind of forgotten pop oddity better to read or hear about than to actually hear.