Limited Edition

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (29 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 44:39

eMusic Review

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Rob O'Connor

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Roger McGuinn, Limited Edition
2004 | Label: April First Productions / The Orchard

In the '60s, Roger McGuinn — along with his Byrds-mates — pioneered the alloy of psychedelia and country, and in the time since, he has refined and redirected his approach, revisiting the joy he felt upon first discovering traditional music and marrying it to the sonic power of the 12-string electric guitar. Limited Edition finds McGuinn wistful of those earlier times, as in "Parade of Lost Dreams," which is practically a sequel to the Byrds 'classic "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n 'Roll Star," and the Beatles '"If I Needed Someone," which McGuinn's old friend George Harrison wrote after hearing McGuinn's version of "The Bells of Rhymney." Yet despite McGuinn's formidable catalogue, he seems most comfortable looking past the middle distance of his own career and delving into positively ancient jazz, blues, folk and country standards like "Shenandoah," "Shady Grove," "Saint James Infirmary" and even "When the Saints Go Marching In." Underneath all that electricity remains the heart of a folkie who still values the craft of a great and simple song.

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A Real Pleasure

manitou

A new record by a rock dinosaur. But it really is American folk-rock at its best. So check it out. On and On is particularly beautiful, as is Shenendoah. I'd give this 5, but it does drag in places.

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They Say All Media Guide

There’s something familiar about Roger McGuinn’s transformation from the acoustic folknik of Treasures From the Folk Den to the folk-rocker of Limited Edition. Indeed, it’s as though he glanced back at his own career, born in the heart of the early-’60s folk revival and fully realized in the mid-’60s with the Byrds, and decided to dust off the blueprint. The Folk Den underlines his roots, featuring guest spots by revival contemporaries like Judy Collins, Pete Seeger, and Odetta, whereas Limited Edition, by taking the 12-string Rickenbacker out of mothballs, emphasizes his artistic maturation. It’s difficult, however, to consciously do what one once did unconsciously, and McGuinn returns to his old haunts with mixed results.
Limited Edition begins with a jaunty take on George Harrison’s “If I Needed Someone,” a musical tribute to the man who led McGuinn to pick up the Rickenbacker in the first place. The effort, though well sung, finally turns flat thanks to stiff percussion and unimaginative guitar runs that distract more than decorate the song. “Parade of Lost Dreams” works much better, marrying the sounds of the Byrds and Buffalo Springfield into an enticing folk-country-rock blend highlighted by the nifty guitar work that’s tightly woven into the song’s tapestry. Before the listener can get too comfortable with any particular sound, though, McGuinn is busy trying on another musical hat. He combines hip-hop and folk for the oddest take on “Shady Grove” ever committed to CD, and switches to straight rock for a version of “James Alley Blues.” The overall effect of Limited Edition is a bit scattershot, as though it was recorded over a long period of time. McGuinn’s in good voice, and it’s pleasant enough to hear him pick up the electric 12-string guitar again, but many of these songs — “Shenandoah,” “When the Saints Go Marching In,” and “Saint James Infirmary” — receive lackluster treatments. Limited Edition will probably entertain hardcore McGuinn fans, but it doesn’t qualify as a new chapter in his distinguished career. – Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

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