Bobby Bare Sings Lullabys, Legends And Lies (And More)

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (56 ratings)
Bobby Bare Sings Lullabys, Legends And Lies (And More) album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Bobby Bare (See All Albums by Bobby Bare)
  • Date Released: Jul 24, 2007

  • Genre: Country/Folk, Style: Contemporary Country

  • Label: RLG/Legacy

Total Tracks: 30   Total Length: 116:46

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

a must have

thewinner

this is possibly his best album. and an all around classic country album. good from start to finish, and the all the bonus tracks are a best of his crucial outlaw period albums. shel's a genius & bobby's voice & style is unbeatable.

user avatar

My Favorites on Disc 2

ParadiseMissouri

I really like "Singing In The Kitchen" - very infectious, and "Tequila Sheila" - which shows off songwriter Shel Silverstein's wit.

user avatar

A Legend of an Album

deeharry

This is one of those albums that defines an aritis this is Bobby Bare at his song writting and vocal best

user avatar

Never Tire of It

EMUSIC-01A98640

Bought this album back in the 70s in vinyl. When CDs first came out it was one of the first that I kept looking for. There are some really great songs here.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Banging on the Pots and Pans: Songs for Kids and their Parents

By Sujan Hong-Raphael, Senior Manager, Label Relations

With songs about airplanes and trains, counting and clapping, and of course, a funky penguin, Banging on the Pots and Pans features all ages, genre and era-spanning tunes that are kid-tested, mother-approved. You'll hear classic cuts from Rufus Thomas, Shirley Ellis and the Pointer Sisters, newer favorites by the Apples in Stereo, Young Fresh Fellows and Luv Clowns as well kid-friendly tracks from the White Stripes, Bobby Charles and Brian Wilson. All together now! more »

They Say All Music Guide

Returning to RCA after a stint at Mercury Records, Bobby Bare teamed up with songwriter Shel Silverstein for 1973′s Bobby Bare Sings Lullabys, Legends and Lies. The idea of the record is clearly laid out in the title — this album is a collection of American tall tales and myths, all filtered through Silverstein’s signature humor (sometimes silly, sometimes clever, sometimes sentimental, sometimes slyly lewd) and delivered with Bare’s signature warm, friendly manner. Although Bare had recorded a song or two of Shel’s before, this was the first time that he devoted a full album to his material. But more noteworthy is that this album finds the singer developing a loose, offhand way of performance that emphasizes both his character and the freewheeling eclecticism of his music. Musically, it’s not far removed from his Mercury records, where his progressive country rubbed shoulders with pop, rock, and folk, but his laid-back, open-ended performances let the music breathe, while the Silverstein songs give the album cohesion and an overt, welcome sense of humor. All this helped reignite Bare’s career, giving him a new signature sound that carried him through the next few years, until he left RCA for Columbia, where he just got rowdier. It was also the biggest album of his career, spending 30 weeks on the Billboard country charts (where it peaked at number five), with a number one hit in “Marie Laveau” and a number two single in “Daddy What If.” Years later, it still stands as one of his very best — maybe it didn’t produce classics like “Detroit City,” nor does it have the brilliant highs of some earlier and later records, but song for song, Bare was rarely this consistent or enjoyable. [In 2007, RCA/Legacy reissued Lullabies, Legends and Lies as a double-disc deluxe edition. The original album is on the first disc while the second disc is devoted to Silverstein covers Bare recorded over the '70s and early '80s, including highlights from the riotous Down N Dirty album ("Numbers" and "Tequlia Sheila"). It's an excellent supplement, making an already essential album even better.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

more »