The Best Of The Hightone Years

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The Best Of The Hightone Years album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 60:01

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Love this music

suzyq54

Somewhat new to Buddy & Julie Miller, but am so glad I found them! Very real heartfelt music and this album is a keeper. Only track that didn't seem to fit in to me was #11- one of those that seemed out of place.

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Love this music

suzyq54

Somewhat new to Buddy & Julie Miller, but am so glad I found them! Very real heartfelt music and this album is a keeper. Only track that didn't seem to fit in to me was #11- one of those that seemed out of place.

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Buddy is the MAN

Latch

great vocalist, great guitarist, great artist - this is real music

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has some good ones

JANXTER

this one has some good tracks, but as I said in my other review Emusic has omitted the best albums by Buddy Miller and Julie Miller.

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Quite good, this

Titus-Groan

And the stuff with Julie is very good

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What a picker

boon52

Not only is buddy a consummate back-up performer(Emmulou, Robt. Plant/Alison Krause, et. al), he and his wife, Julie, are incredible songsters in their own write. This best of recording shows off some splendid songs,and thanks to eMusic for giving y'all 4 bonus tracks!

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the real deal

branhan

Buddy and Julie Miller make great music. Period. Great. Not a term to be tossed around lightly. The only thing as cool as Buddy's voice is his guitar playing. Check him (them) out and you won't be sorry. This is a great compliation because it includes some of the best songs from "Buddy and Julie Miller", e.g. trks 1, 6, 7, and 13. His "How I Got to Memphis" appears also on the Solomon Burke album Buddy produced, and both versions are gems. (Wish they'd get put that Solomon Burke album - "Nashville" - on here so folks could enjoy that treasure.) Wonderful stuff.

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They Say All Music Guide

Buddy Miller is country in a way that country isn’t marketed much these days. He knows life is ragged and messy, and that’s the way he approaches songs, and he sings with a wild, willful abandon that sounds as real and lived in as the day is long. There’s nothing smooth and polished about Buddy Miller, which is why he doesn’t get played on contemporary country stations and gets shuffled away under the Americana or alt-country umbrellas. Whatever. He’s the real deal, and this excellent sampler of his eight-year stay at Hightone Records shows that again and again, and it makes a perfect introduction to this delightfully maverick singer and songwriter. There isn’t a slack song in the sequence, but a few really stand out, particularly the opener, “The River’s Gonna Run,” written by his wife, Julie Miller, who sings on it, too, and the couple sounds like the second coming of Richard & Mimi Fariña if the Fariñas had spent a lifetime drinking and smoking in a honky tonk road house. It’s country, even if Nashville has no clue that it is. Other highlights here include “Somewhere Trouble Don’t Go,” a loosely sung but masterful version of Richard Thompson’s “Keep Your Distance,” and a fun romp through “Hole in My Head,” which Miller co-wrote with Jim Lauderdale. But each of these 16 tracks has something to offer, and even though they’re drawn from five different albums for Hightone, they feel like they all belong together (the album isn’t arranged chronologically, which means the songs bounce off each other in a natural flow, and it shows someone put some thought into sequencing), and the end result is an impressive portrait of an American treasure. Folks, this is country the way it ought to be done. – Steve Leggett

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