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Hal Brolund : Worn Out Shoes
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Roosty Americana singer/songwriter stories about roadside chicken joints to failed relationships and pure red blooded lust. The undercurrent of his work is quiet faith that love will win out.
Genre: Folk: Folk Blues
Release Date: 2008
Worn Out Shoes Record Label: Hal Brolund
  • Download Album (MP3) - $10.00
  • Buy CD - $14.99
SPECIAL: 10% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Worn Out Shoes 4:37 $0.99
Call Of Angels 4:13 $0.99
Goin Up To Glory 3:40 $0.99
Poulet Shack 4:00 $0.99
Automobile 2:40 $0.99
Let Me In 2:39 $0.99
Somebody On Your Bond 3:12 $0.99
I Can't Cut That Bun 3:06 $0.99
Atlanta Moan 3:52 $0.99
I Am The Lucky One 3:45 $0.99
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Album Notes

Worn Out Shoes is a captivating blend of confidence and vulnerability and highlights Brolund's skills as a writer and performer of original material. The songs range from stories about roadside chicken joints to failed relationships and pure red blooded lust. The undercurrent of the CD is a quiet faith that love will win out and that the real heroism of a relationship isn't whether it survives but that fragile broken people even try to love at all. Amen!

At 18 Manitoba Hal Brolund began to pursue music. "I was hanging out with a buddy and he was jamming on his acoustic guitar to some record. Suddenly, like a bolt of lightning it hit me. I would play guitar the rest of my life" says Brolund. Choosing a path at 18 isn't that unusual but Hal didn't play guitar yet and in fact had failed high school band!

That was in 1986 and he hasn't doubted that vision yet. He played covers in talent shows and open mics and by 1995 he was traveling throughout Manitoba and North Western Ontario playing the bar band circuit with a duo called Cheap Justice playing top 40 jukebox hits with a drum machine.

In 1996 he grew disillusioned by the bar circuit and quit to work on songwriting. "I had been writing since I began but never took it seriously" says Hal, "but I started to see that in order to grow as an artist I had to write my own songs."

In 1997 Hal recorded a flood relief song at CBC studios called Manitoba's Under Water. This was the start of his original recording career and the start of touring across Canada. In the ten years since he began writing and performing his own material Hal has logged over 200,000kms across Canada playing Ocean to Ocean in coffee houses, theatres and festival stages.

He tempers his finger picking style with a sharp sense of humour and gritty lyrics punctuated by the smooth slide of a veteran blues master. Like anyone whose name is a place, Manitoba Hal wears his love for his roots on his sleeve. But those roots aren't just in the prairie soil. Hal's got a songwriter's roots in eerie folk - murder ballads and killer floods - and a player's roots in the deep, dark, fixin' to die blues. This is a man who can sing the word "lonesome" like he means it, and no mistake.

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