The Moon Was Blue

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (46 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 36:15

eMusic Review

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Yancey Strickler

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
One of the best country records of the year
2005 | Label: Dualtone

Bobby Bare's country career is positively Gumpian: Willie Nelson's roommate in the early '50s, supporting Roy Orbison in the late '50s, palling around with the original country gentleman Chet Atkins in the early '60s and part of the folk scene later in the decade, and a Top Ten country singer in the '70s. Bare fell out of favor in the '80s and '90s when country ditched its soft shuffle, but his comeback might just start now with the wonderful The Moon Was Blue, his first proper studio record since 1983.

The best moments of The Moon Was Blue — and make no mistake, there are many — recall prime George Jones. Like Jones 'essential Mercury recordings, this album employs strong-lunged backing singers for choruses, reverb on Bare's vocals and simple backing instrumentation that showcases the songwriting more than the performances. The arrangements — played by, among others, members of Lambchop and Silver Jews — place Bare front and center, and his baritone swings wide and true in the open spaces. Johnny Cash's American recordings are a rougher and sparer approximation of the style.

Virtually every song here hails from the ’50s and ’60s, and some of them… read more »

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Love it

JGM

I am 2nd cousin to Bobby on his Mothers side. Love his music. I don't understand why there isn't any other of his albums on this site. I would have them all if they were.

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an inspiration

thegroovewrangler

There are some who will argue that the production values are a bit over-done in an attempt to bring Bobby Bare's music to a newer sensibility, one that is... oh, let's say more than a wee bit self-conscious. That's the way the pendulum swings nowadays. Look past it (with the exception of "Am I That Easy To Forget," you won't mind the trappings). This could very well be the best country album of the decade, by one of one of the genre's few living giants.

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Do I Hear a Classic?

jazzmine

I don't know if this is a classic, I'm really not a big country fan. I prefer Jazz. You know the type: A little Waylon, some Johnny, & Dwight Yoakam of course! Yet Bobby & Jr. just knocked me off my feet with this one. The AMG review suggests this is the best country cd this year. The Moon Was Blue happens to be the best release I have heard this year of any music genre! Is this a classic? I don't know, but it's my favorite country cd.

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Mixed Bag

BD

Most country fans will find someting to love and something to hate on this album, sometimes even within the same song. Several of the cuts are badly overproduced. (That is NOT a short in your speaker wire at the beginning of "Everybody's Talking at Me.") Sometimes Bare's plaintive and soulful voice is just about drowned out by the background noise. When he comes through, though, as in (most of) "Am I That Easy to Forget," "Are you Sincere?" and "The Balad of Lucy Jordan," the result is pleasing. But I come away wishing they had not tried quite so hard.

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They Say All Media Guide

In 2005, Bobby Bare was coaxed out of 22-year-long retirement from recording by his son Bobby Bare, Jr. to record The Moon Was Blue, a collection of 11 songs the veteran country outlaw always loved but, for the most part, never recorded. Bare Jr. teamed up with fellow country renegade Mark Nevers — a Nashville veteran, but also a member of indie rock eccentrics Lambchop — to provide production and assemble a backing band for Bare Sr., who would just pick the songs and sing. Bare chose a set of songs divided between pop standards like “It’s All in the Game” and “Love Letters in the Sand,” country classics like “Am I That Easy to Forget,” folk-rock like “Everybody’s Talkin’,” and even a Shel Silverstein tune that he never got around to recording before (“The Ballad of Lucy Jordan”). His son and Nevers gave the songs quiet, moody arrangements ideal for lonely late-night listening, and while there are some arty touches scattered throughout the record, they’re usually used as sonic texturing in the background, since the focus is always on Bare and the song. Which is how it should be, because Bare has always been a commanding, compelling interpretive singer, skills that have not left him, as this low-key gem illustrates. Bare sounds old and wise, but he never sounds weary or tired (certainly, he doesn’t sound as if he’s in his seventies), and his robust baritone provides an appropriately weighty anchor to arrangements that otherwise seem to float in the air. While Bare Jr. and Nevers certainly indulge in some affected artiness on occasion, it actually enhances the overall sound and effect of The Moon Was Blue; the contrast between the dreamy production and Bare Sr.’s deep voice helps illustrate what a fine singer he is. This is an understated album, never indulging in the myth-making of Johnny Cash’s American recordings and never presenting itself as a major work, but that’s the appeal of The Moon Was Blue: it’s a modest yet musically rich album that succeeds because of its modest nature. Other comeback albums may be splashier than The Moon Was Blue, but few have ever been as successful as this, since it not only stands on its own terms, it provides a nice coda to Bare’s wonderful, underrated career. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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