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cameron morgan : the ambition tax
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Debut album performed in an original style that mixes pop and modern rock with jazz flavors. Lyrically personal, soulful vocals and a tonal range from delicate acoustic finger-picking to electric guitar blow-outs. Think Nick Drake meets Jeff Buckley.
Genre: Rock: Modern Rock
Release Date: 2005
the ambition tax Record Label: zashabuti
  • Download Album (MP3) - $7.99
  • Buy CD - $9.99
SPECIAL: 20% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
zither 1:12 $0.99
wake up freedom 3:45 $0.99
falling down 3:27 $0.99
blood red 2:03 $0.99
bottom line 5:15 $0.99
i get around 4:21 $0.99
nov 26. 2004 3:43 $0.99
pollution blues (cd bonus track) 7:04 $0.99
4th of july 4:06 $0.99
amerika 5:55 $0.99
close 7:26 $0.99
in the heart 4:46 $0.99
preview all songs

Album Notes

A spiritual message sung in a plaintive tenor, "Zither" sets the tone of the album, which ranges from delicate acoustic finger-picking to storming, effects-laden, electric guitar blow-outs.

Beyond playing all the guitars and keyboards heard on the record, Morgan proves himself a supple, earnest vocalist -- evocative of a less melodramatic Jeff Buckley or the younger Sting -- wrapping righteous socio-political convictions in Rundgrenesque Anglo-pop confections such as "Wake Up Freedom," "Falling Down," and "Blood Red."

The industrial-strength "Bottom Line" and the shuffling "I Get Around" are both tied into the album's titular concerns. "In 'Bottom Line,' the music business is just a metaphor," says Morgan. "Our whole society is built on the idea that if you work real hard, you might get a break. But then you realize that it's not how hard you try, it's about how much you can sell yourself."

The jazzy, minor-key "Pollution Blues" addresses burning ecological issues with a blazing guitar fade that parallels and echoes the fiery images and fretgrinding exit found in "Falling Down."

A gently percussive "Nov 26, 2004" serves as a peaceful refuge from the album's opening salvo. "That song is designed to be a palate-cleanser," explains Morgan, "as if it were the last cut on the first side of the album, which -- in the case of the vinyl version of The Ambition Tax -- it is."

Underscoring the album's release date, the flamenco-flavored "4th Of July" is -- in Morgan's words -- "meant to be celebratory, but narcissism keeps creeping into the picture, leading to the singlemindedness that plagues this country," as evidenced in the National Anthem-quoting vocal refrain that erupts out of the parade drumming-driven "Amerika."

The album's closing tracks, the inexorably building "Close" and the pop standard-inspired "In The Heart," are love songs that yearn for a simpler life that remains tantalizingly out of reach ... for now.

For further information, go to cameronmorgan.com

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