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From The End Of Your Leash

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (147 ratings)
From The End Of Your Leash album cover
01
Strange Bird
2:09 $0.99
02
Valentine
3:09 $0.99
03
The Terrible Sunrise
3:07 $0.99
04
Visit Me In Music City
4:03 $0.99
05
Your Favorite Hat
3:32 $0.99
06
Don't Follow Me (I'm Lost)
3:54 $0.99
07
Let's Rock And Roll
4:06 $0.99
08
Borrow Your Girl
4:20 $0.99
09
Things I Didn't Say
2:16 $0.99
10
Your Adorable Beast
3:20 $0.99
11
Beguiled Bashful Burnt
3:43 $0.99
12
[Untitled Hidden Track]
5:26 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 43:05

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Just a fun album to listen to...

KrustyMonkey

Do yourself a favor, download this album. This dude (and his father) have been around music longer than cultures have been counting money. Musicianship is outstanding + the lyrics are fun to listen to.

user avatar

I wanna like it

BluegrassSailor

I know he's a brilliant musician. And I want to like his stuff, especially this album. I really do. And at turns, it's amusing and dare I say good. But then it gets funky, or silly...and that's all in the same song. His stuff feels like its trying too hard to be unconventional. At the very least he's interesting, so I'll keep an ear out for future releases...

user avatar

Best Yet!

sysop

I consider this one of his best albums yet! A must listen for anyone.

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not to hijack the tread, but.....

ShakyToo

"godawful", PW solo? C'mon. Do me a favor, listen to "Stereo/Mono" and tell me thats not great rocknroll, I'm just sayin'. Love-Love

user avatar

Countrified Westerberg

Zotzedwriter

If you like the Paul Westerberg of the Replacements (not the godawful solo stuff), you're almost certain to like Bare Jr. No, he's not a thrash rocker. But lyrically he explores the same boozy, luckless terrain as PW. Must downloads: Valentine and Let's Rock 'n' Roll.

user avatar

Get this record NOW.

e

Pedigree notwithstanding (although that's reason enough to give it a listen...) Bobby Bare Jr's records, and this one in particular, are challenging, smart, and above all else FUN. His ability to bend genre and mood while seeming completely real and at times raw is amazing.... you owe it to yourself to put this in your ear. You won't take it out for days...

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eMusic Features

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Interview: Bobby Bare, Jr.

By Peter Blackstock, eMusic Contributor

Whether or not being officially designated Bobby Bare "Junior" at birth predestined the country legend's offspring to follow his dad's path toward music, there won't be a Bobby Bare III. Junior's third child and second son, Shelby Booker Bare, was born two days before we sat down for an interview this summer before a show at the IOTA Club & Cafe in Arlington, Virginia; Shelby follows Isabella and Beckham. And yet, Junior has already recruited his… more »

They Say All Music Guide

One thing that country and the blues have long had in common is a penchant for dark humor — an ability to find humorous, clever ways of addressing life’s challenges and disappointments. That ability to laugh and cry at the same time is something that country’s royalty — Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Buck Owens, and George Jones, among many others — have in common with blues greats like Willie Dixon and Buddy Guy. And that laughing-through-the-tears approach is certainly alive and well on From the End of Your Leash, which often demonstrates that Bobby Bare Jr. is a master of dark humor. Anyone who calls his band the Young Criminals’ Starvation League obviously has a taste for twisted humor, and this Americana/roots rock effort is hardly the work of a mindlessly naïve Pollyanna who goes through life wearing rose-colored glasses — Bare’s world-weary vocals and lyrics indicate that he’s been around the block too many times for that. Bare sings and writes about loneliness, heartbreak, sadness, and dysfunctional relationships — he writes about being down on your luck — and through it all, his sense of humor is a definite asset. The singer/songwriter brings a variety of influences to his rock & roll — influences ranging from blues and Memphis soul to punk to country, and that country influence isn’t surprising when you consider that his father is country star Bobby Bare Sr. But the younger Bare is hardly a carbon copy of his famous dad; while Bare Sr.’s name is synonymous with country, Bare Jr. is primarily a rocker with country influences. At times, From the End of Your Leash can be a little too self-indulgent for its own good, but that’s only a minor problem — one that is easily outweighed by the warmth, humanity, and soulfulness that Bare Jr. brings to this generally memorable CD. – Alex Henderson

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