The Land Of Heroes

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 38:28

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One of Jorma's best ever

JB123

This is probably Jorma's best album after Quah and Blue Country Heart. Jorma's solo career has been filled with releases that suffer from either weaker material or poor recording/performance. Every couple of years though he seems to tie it all together and issue a masterful release. Quah (released in 1974) and Blue Country Heart (released in 2002) are the best examples of this. Land of the Heroes (released in 1995) is another example of where Jorma matched top-notch material with attention to detail in performance and recording. Particularly strong selections include: Re-Enlistment Blues, Trial By Fire, Do Not Go Gentle and Follow The Drinking Gourd.

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They Say All Media Guide

His third album release of 1995, The Land Of Heroes was Jorma Kaukonen’s first new solo studio album in a decade. In the meantime, he had been part of reunions of Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna, but The Land Of Heroes was in the tradition of Quah, Jorma, and Too Hot To Handle, mostly acoustic collections that combined new originals (vocal tunes and instrumentals) with remakes of older originals and covers of songs from the standard folk-blues repertoire. Kaukonen has largely shied away from doing solo work in his career, and even here he worked closely with Michael Falzarano, who co-produced, played guitar and mandolin, and had writing credits on three songs. The one new Kaukonen song with lyrics, “From The Land Of Heroes,” was a moving tribute to his Finnish ancestors, making you wish that he would spend more time writing, even though it was nice to hear Airplane remakes like “Trial By Fire” and blues songs by the Reverend Gary Davis. The Falzarano material was pedestrian, however. – William Ruhlmann

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