In the Journey

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (41 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 47:25

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Get his live CD......

websterdrum

Martin Sexton is a truly talented song writer, an outstanding guitar player, a phenomenal vocalist, but his most unique talent is performing live. I saw him open for Nickel Creek and he nearly stole the show. His music is meant to be heard live, not in the sterile format of a studio recording. SORRY MARTIN! Don't get me wrong, this is a great album, but he is absolutely much better live! Get both "Live Wide Open" discs and hear the REAL Martin Sexton. I would drive a long way to see him perform.

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Not his best

J.Phillips

I'm not sure why this album got the Emusic pick. It really isn't half as good as Black Sheep, which is amazing. I reccomend getting Black Sheep if you have never heard Martin Sexton before and then if you like that I would even get the Live Wide Open cds before getting this.

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They Say All Media Guide

Martin Sexton recorded In the Journey in a friend’s attic in 1990, while he was making his living busking on the streets of Boston. He sold cassette copies out of his suitcase in remarkable volumes for a demo tape (half-a-decade later the album was finally released on CD, distributed in part by Sexton’s new label, Eastern Front). The cassette’s success should be no surprise to anyone who has heard him sing. The chief purpose of a demo tape is to show off the artist’s talent, and Sexton enthusiastically embraces any opportunity to show off. Splitting the nine songs evenly between Bostonian contemporary folk and mostly acoustic blues and jazz, Sexton displays a vocal elasticity which would be amazing even if he weren’t only 23-years-old. On “Things to Come,” he gives his rangy Stevie Wonder baritone a splash of reggae spice. On the title track (a freshly produced Toad the Wet Sprocket-like folk-pop tune) he starts off in a restrained impersonation of mumbly ’90s rockers, then belts out the chorus with R&B bravado. On “Hard Times,” he interrupts his soulful blues performance to do a dead-on impersonation of a wah-wah trumpet. On “13 Step Reprise” he becomes the whole band, imitating not only a Motown background chorus but also a full brass section. He even does character voices, playing a froggy-voiced old man on the well-written folk narrative “The Way I Am.” Sexton seems to be able to make his voice do anything he pleases without effort. The album is also very well produced by Sexton, despite the slightly schizophrenic division between the folk and the jazz. He mixes musical elements with creative assurance, incorporating mandolins, guitars, flutes, accordions, a variety of shuffling rhythms, and a plethora of vocal tracks. – Darryl Cater

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