Back To Artist
Dave Lykins : Blurry White Guy
Log in to add to your wishlist
Subversive country music that is plugged in, loud, yet never loses its acoustic style.
Genre: Country: Alt-Country
Release Date: 2008
Blurry White Guy Record Label: Dave Lykins
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
  • Buy CD - $12.97
SPECIAL: 40% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Houston 4:08 $0.99
Greetings From the Riviera 5:08 $0.99
Good News 4:28 $0.99
I\'ve Been in Love Before 2:34 $0.99
Let Me Carry This 4:14 $0.99
Here\'s Your Love Song 3:31 $0.99
Day After Valentine 4:06 $0.99
Come Along 2:08 $0.99
Flying 5:33 $0.99
This Is My House 4:16 $0.99
preview all songs

Album Notes

David Lykins – Blurry White Guy
2008, David Lykins

David “Ravin’ Dave” Lykins is a Chicago area actor/singer/songwriter/poet with a reputation for a big voice. His debut CD, 2008’s Blurry White Guy has been described as “subversive country music”, and it’s easy to see why. Lykins takes traditional country forms and imbues them with a not-quite-reckless sense of variety and composition that goes far beyond your typical music row pop hybrid. With a supporting cast including Pat Flynn (New Grass Revival), Chris Leuzinger (Garth Brooks), John Gardener (Dixie Chicks), Dow Tomlin and Jeff Taylor, Lykins has produced one of the more intriguing country albums of the past year.

Blurry White Guy opens with Houston, a Country/Rock hybrid about Hurricane Katrina and the impact it has on the residents of New Orleans. It’s an amazingly upbeat song for the dark, solemn subject matter and has real commercial punch. The family in the song is separated, with the children in Memphis and the parents in Houston. This is probably one of the best musical paeans to the Katrina Disaster that anyone has written/recorded. Greetings From The Riviera is a great story song that is heart-breaking in its picturesque detail. Let Me Carry This has a wonderfully dark atmosphere that frames Lykins’ All-American country voice, and while Lykins writes in essentially classic country forms, he often builds sound and structure into his songs that separate them from the pop/country pack.

A personal favorite here is Day After Valentine. It’s a sweet song without sounding hokey or trite and likely to be a fan favorite. Come Along is another favorite; a song that captures some of the Celtic spirit of Country and Western Music. You’ll also want to check out Flying and This Is My House.

Read more...

REVIEWS