Arc Angels

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Arc Angels album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 60:57

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Amazing record, only bad thing is it was the last

banomassa

What can I say. This is a rock classic, Texas rock all the way. What a group! Amazing songs, amazing performances. Doyle Bramhall II is one of the most over looked artists of the last twenty years! Even though he is now quite famous for his sideman contributions he is still relatively unknown for this. It would have been huge if it had lasted. These songs are timeless. Charlie and Doyle are great songwriters and worked well together. Sadly it wasn't meant to be. But at least we have this album!

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A GEM,not to be overlooked

BLUESMAN4EVER

This is a personal FAVORITE album for me,and to find it here,Priceless!I only coveted the cassete for almost 20years,sucker still plays good.Thanks to the upgraded catalog E-Music."See what Tommorow Brings"is the best tribute to SRV that has ever been written.If you listen close you can hear Stevie Ray Vaughn in the songs they put on this album.I THINK IT STANDS ALONE!

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They Say All Music Guide

There are one-hit wonders throughout the history of music, but very few one-album wonders like the Arc Angels. After the death of blues-rock guitar hero Stevie Ray Vaughan, fellow singing guitarists, Texans, and Vaughan devotees Doyle Bramhall II and Charlie Sexton formed the quartet with Vaughan’s rhythm section of bassist Tommy Shannon and drummer Chris Layton. Their 1992 debut release would also be their swan song, but the self-titled album would prove to be one of the best rock/pop/blues recordings of the decade as well. The opening “Living in a Dream” is the only tune Sexton and Bramhall II co-composed, and is perhaps the closest that the Arc Angels come to re-creating Vaughan’s signature sound. “Paradise Cafe” is one of a handful of tracks Sexton co-wrote with pop composer Tonio K., but he and Bramhall II engage in some ZZ Top-like call-and-response vocals, and Bramhall II’s Vaughan dedication, “Sent by Angels,” features some of the album’s most impassioned singing. Funky tunes like “Sweet Nadine,” “Good Time,” and “Carry Me On” lighten the mood, and Shannon, Layton, and guest keyboardist Ian McLagan play brilliantly throughout in setting up the singing guitarists. The spirit of Vaughan permeates the recording, from the production of Little Steven to the liner notes (“Dedicated to our friend, Stevie Ray Vaughan. We miss you”), yet never sounds forced, purposeful, or contrived. Alas, the final two songs — the rocking “Shape I’m In” and epic “Too Many Ways to Fall” — sport titles that point toward the Arc Angels being a Vaughan-like comet rather than a future veteran group. Sexton’s solo recording career had started as a teenager; Bramhall II and his father Doyle Bramhall were friends of Vaughan’s (the elder Bramhall even composing and co-composing tunes with the guitar giant). But the two frontmen who complemented each other so well nonetheless couldn’t blend their egos as easily. Arc Angels stands as testimony that a band needn’t have a long career to have a lasting legacy. – Bill Meredith

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