Trampoline

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Trampoline album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 52:43

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Someone Should Tell her

EMUSIC-007754AE

This song basically defines how big Raul Malo will become later, with two Grammies, plus going solo with several successful songs.

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Someone Should Tell her

EMUSIC-007754AE

This song basically defines how big Raul Malo will become later, with two Grammies, plus going solo with several successful songs.

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A great Mavericks record

fontmaven

This is one of two I keep clicking on, of all the Mavericks albums in my iTunes. Raul has a great, great vocal gift, and the band meets his raises every time he changes up the style. With remarkable facility, "Trampoline" bounces from dancehall pastiche ("Dance the Night Away") to lush string arrangements that more-than-recall Roy Orbison ("I've Got This Feeling") to pre-rock'n'roll crooning ("Fool #1") and it all works—the exception being "Dolores", which I removed from my playlist. I wish this band was still together!

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They Say All Music Guide

As their career progresses, the Mavericks are becoming more of a showcase for vocalist/frontman Raul Malo, both for better and for worse. They may be losing their band identity, but that may have been inevitable, considering that Malo is such a gifted, powerful musician. He is the driving force behind all of the group’s stylistic fusions, their blend of honky tonk with country-rock, classic rock & roll, pop, and Latin. On Music for All Occasions, the stylistic blends sounded a little gimmicky, but the band sounds revitalized on Trampoline — even the vaudevillian “Dolores” rings as true as the shuffling, cha-cha “I Should Know.” If anything, the album is the least “country” album the Mavericks have ever done, but that’s primarily because all of their influences have blended seamlessly together, creating an original, altogether intoxicating sound. Furthermore, they’re not simply surface — Malo’s songs are clever constructions, ranking among the most imaginative roots songwriting of the ’90s. His writing, combined with his band’s musical panache, makes Trampoline a ride worth taking. – Thom Owens

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