Gimcracks and Gewgaws

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (23 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 44:37

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Mose the Man

bobwalruss

A real gem. Great songs and Mose is as lively as ever. Saxophone and electric guitar add a special extra quality here not known from his older records (at least the ones I know). So cool!

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Fucking great

Hulabaloo

This is a fucking great album.

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Thanks, eMusic!

daeby

Wow! This is one I never would have stumbled across without eMusic. Not something I'd otherwise know about or try to find. But now I've downloaded the whole thing. Light, fun, something to listen to when you're not trying to make your music be so serious. Try a few samples - maybe you'll like it. I recommend "The More You Get" and "What Will It Be". Probably not going to be high on the download list for those just trying to get what they already know.

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They Say All Media Guide

The older Mose Allison gets, the sharper his mind becomes, the more idiosyncratic his music sounds, and the more pleasure the aficionado gets for spending the better part of an hour with his latest stuff. By this time, the 70-year old philosopher from Tippo, Miss. had sharpened his wit and insight on life to an even keener edge, musing wryly on materialism, technology, aging, death, even his own name (“MJA, Jr.”). The tunes seem to have disappeared almost entirely but it doesn’t matter; the lyrics are so damned clever and as hilarious as ever, even when they are obviously sequels to previous masterworks like “Your Mind Is On Vacation” (“What’s With You”) or “Young Man’s Blues” (“Old Man Blues”). Mose’s piano style by now has been pared down to its unique essentials, a ceaseless, swinging linear flow drawing from the three Bs — Bach, Bartok and bop — and his voice has barely aged since his Prestige days. Mark Shim muses ably on tenor sax now and then, and guitarist Russell Malone ranges all over the stylistic lot between R&B and jazz. At this rate, waiting four years or so between albums in the ’90s, Allison has kept his creative batteries fresh every time out. – Richard S. Ginell

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