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Frank Morey : Cold In Hand
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Tom Waits meets Johnny Cash in Jack Kerouac's hometown.
Genre: Rock: Roots Rock
Release Date: 2002
Cold In Hand Record Label: Frank Morey
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
  • Buy CD - $12.00
SPECIAL: 20% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Blame It On The Devil 2:40 $0.99
Goin' Down Kickin' 3:29 $0.99
Luci 4:19 $0.99
Slick And Marylou 5:02 $0.99
Barflies, Dead Dreams And Rivers Of Whiskey Lies 4:57 $0.99
Darkside of the Road 2:13 $0.99
In The Midde Of Nowhere 3:02 $0.99
Two By Two 4:16 $0.99
Bad Like Jesse James 4:13 $0.99
Ghosts And Guns 4:08 $0.99
Bumb Shimmy 3:47 $0.99
Baby, It's Cold Outside 4:39 $0.99
Junkietown 4:15 $0.99
China Doll 2:14 $0.99
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Album Notes

"This is real urban folk music. Songs about Junkies and Waitresses, Club fighters, vets, and people who find salvation in Atlantic City. It's Howlin Wolf, Louis Armstrong and Tom Waits."

Dave Palmater WUMB, (for Performing Songwriter Magazine)

"Frank Morey wraps his gutter rhymes in arrangements that veer from coffeehouse blues to Salvation Army brass." -

Kevin Convey, Boston Herald


"witty, gritty blues" -

Hayley Kaufman, Boston Globe


"This ain't blues- This is, Honkeytonk, bullshit!" -

Irate Drunk Ayer, MA Roadhouse


In today's society the word 'genius' is oft overused and consequently undervalued. But there are times when nothing less will do, when any other term is quite simply inadequate. And I'd submit, without reservation, that Frank Morey's "Cold In Hand" is indeed a work of unfettered genius. "Cold In Hand" is Frank's third disc. Based in Lowell, Massachusetts, all have been released on his own label. Word is there'll be a new one out in Fall 2002 on Delmark records, and if he maintains the quality evident on this outing, my guess is he's about to become much better known. Not that he's likely to see much airplay, though; Frank's world is much too dark for mainstream radio, an almost frightening place peopled with rubbies and rounders, the losers and the lost, dreaming their hopeless dreams and scheming their desperate schemes.
Religious imagery abounds, with God and the Devil seemingly locked in a battle for both Frank and his characters' souls. But Frank's holding up his end of the fight; in the first track, "Blame It On The Devil," he sings "we'll blame it on the devil/ 'til we get to church and make it alright." Next up is "Goin' Down Kickin," in which Frank defiantly promises to do just that. "Luci" sounds like the female personification of Satan him-or-herself, whose clutches Frank vows to escape . . . "Slick And Mary Lou" is a tender ballad that sees two lost souls find a measure of happiness despite all odds, with just a hint of a whiskey-soaked sentimentality to soften the edges. "Dark Side Of The Road," Frank sounding weary and resigned, is a plea for comfort where comfort is both fleeting and hard indeed to come by. But Frank's resilient; "In The Middle Of Nowhere," he's having the time of his life, fuelled by an unrepentant, unregenerate, and utterly fierce individuality. "Two By Two" continues Frank's obsessions with the struggle between God and the Devil, with the outcome altogether uncertain. Elsewhere there's "Junkietown," with Frank trying to understand how those who seemingly have it all can descend into the darkness, and the cheerful exuberance of "Bumb Shimmy," wherein he seems to revel in that very darkness himself.

Frank's gruff, gravelly voice is perfectly suited to his material. For all the blustery bravado, there's a tender vulnerability underneath it all - well hidden, to be sure, but there nonetheless. Instrumentation, too, is perfect, with his own acoustic guitar augmented by drums, bass, wheezy organ and occasional muted trumpet. There's a strong hint of Tom Waits running through proceedings, both musically and thematically; vocally the resemblance is often uncanny. It's not blues, exactly, but Frank's music is thoroughly suffused with a bluesy sensibility, owing as much to the form as it does to jazz, country, vaudeville, honky tonk . . . like America itself, it's very much a melting pot, a rich mix of influences. Call it, then, 'Americana,' but from the country's underbelly, the dark side of the dream. It's where Frank wants to be, though, where he needs to be, and while he recognizes its perils, there's simply no other place for a soul such as his. I'd suggest you join him there, if only for a while. Just make sure you come back.

John Taylor
www.MN Blues.com

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REVIEWS

Calling all blues heads and barflies
author: Paul Davis
I can hardly find the words. Music of such magnitude is impossible to articulate. You have to experience Cold in Hand for yourself. I spent many a Wednesday night listening to Frank Morey at Vincents in Worcester and let me tell you; the feeling and emotion conveyed by Frank Morey is just as intense on recordings as it is live. This CD speaks to the new life of living in twenty-first century America.
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Witty Gritty Blues!
author: Hayley Kaufman Boston Globe
Witty Gritty Blues!
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great folk music without the whine
author: lesley
I can't give this CD enough praise. It's everything american folk music should be minus the whine. It's cool, it's emotional, it's raw, it gives the feeling of being at a live show. Anyone with a love for smoky clubs, old blues and great story telling will love this album.
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author: Reina
This album is perfect road music, or music to put in when sitting on a balcony smoking and drinking. The voice is reminiscent of Tom Waits- but the lyrics and melodies much more coherent. The way Frank plays with words in this album will really draw you in.
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