Back To Artist
Ed Rogers : Misery and Gold
Log in to add to your wishlist
Honky-tonk country and the rock-folk hybrid mingle on this Fort Worth resident's fine CD. - Mario Tarradell, Dallas Morning News
Genre: Country: Country Rock
Release Date: 2003
Misery and Gold Record Label: Ed Rogers
  • Buy CD - $10.00
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
North Through the Trees 3:14 Album Only
SeƱorita 3:47 Album Only
Portland 4:29 Album Only
Another Jukebox 3:36 Album Only
I Won't Be the Cowboy 5:01 Album Only
Too Many Goodbyes 4:31 Album Only
Misery and Gold 5:16 Album Only
Graveyards and Fireworks Stands 5:18 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

Ed Rogers uses the same grit and wit to craft a song that he used to weather his days building oil rigs on Corpus Christi Bay. He reaches into his unique bag of spunky guitar licks, spins a tale of life as a young East Texan, and dusts it with his infectious sense of humor. Somewhere between blue-collar sweat and hanging out with the hippies at the Kerrville Music Festival, Rogers' mission to his debut CD Misery and Gold began.

Rogers' songs "Señorita" and "Graveyards and Fireworks Stands" bring both poignant sobriety and good-timin' bar choruses to this collection of tie-dyed honky tonk. Six of the eight songs on Misery and Gold were penned by Bain Ennis, Larry Martin and John Williams. These musicians are long-time friends of Rogers' who have played together in incarnations known as The Tone Deaf Cowboys and The Gypsy Troubadours, in Texas and Oklahoma, since the early 1980s. You may see some of them from time to time join Rogers on stage with his current line-up, which includes Chris Curtis on guitar, John Goodson on drums and Roy Robbins on bass.

Co-produced by Curtis Box and Ed Rogers, the disc also features Larry Martin on guitar, Rodger Harrison on bass, Matthew Williams on drums, Ken Halford on keyboards, David Norris on pedal steel guitar, Amanda Hutchins, Curtis Box and Katie Kechnie on backup vocals, Christian Dozzler on accordion, and Danny Gabbert on banjo.

Read more...

REVIEWS