fabulous
author: Lauren
This is the first impulse buy I've ever made here on the beloved CDBaby, and I don't regret it. Shabby Road is glorious.
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Nice range, compelling music.
author: J. Colby
Pat Orchard shows the other side of "Cool Brittania" with songs ranging from sadly subdued to powerful and driving. His songs address hyprocrisy, being on the wrong side of the social and economic order and the false escapes of those who end up cheated, the ones who got the raw deal. The more I listen to Shabby Road the more it moves me.
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startlingly beautiful electrikery
author: Joe Cushley - Mojo Magazine
Pat Orchard has discovered some startlingly beautiful electrikery to bolster his acoustic guitar pickings, and on Shabby Road this superbly complements his Sting-with-a-human-touch vocals.
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Very good texts, voice,guitar playing, production.
author: L.Woolfe
Very good texts, voice,guitar playing, production. This release is a good example of how production of just guitar/voice can be in a perfect balance to become extremely interesting. Beautiful open tunings.
On "Shabby Road" the guitar sound sometimes almost as if the guitar is another complex electronic rhythm device.Recorded on an 8-track. "Though Louck" has some extremely interesting fingerpicking reminding me at some tracks on Rainmaker from Michael Chapman. Haunting and in its way progressive. "Night Train" puts an echo on the fingerpicking thus illustrating a train travel in an almost psychedelic visionary way. "Indian Giver" contuines with a driving playing and powerful haunting melody/voice (without echo, but with same "drive"). "Sunday Parade" is another pearl. A quiet song with nice lyrics, with guitar picking. "Wild West End" is a powerful critical (politics and social conscious busker) song. Into deep emotions on the next great song "Poorman's Earth". After one longer track "Monopoly town" the intimite melancholic but nicely sung last track leaves us touched by this very recommended release. For me his best so far. His first release is more intimite, personal. The second one is with a band (with a more modern rock pop sound). This is the third release.
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