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Tom Savage : Never Shed No Tears
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"steeped in the folk tradition of Dylan and Nebraska-era Springsteen " - Dave Clarke, Scene magazine
Genre: Country: Alt-Country
Release Date: 2006
Never Shed No Tears
Tom Savage
Record Label: Tom Savage
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Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Never Shed No Tears 4:19 + MP3 $0.00
2. Beneath The Rocks 4:07 + MP3 $0.99
3. The State We're In 4:23 + MP3 $0.99
4. On And On 3:55 + MP3 $0.99
5. No Turning Back 3:19 + MP3 $0.99
6. Hang Your Head And Cry 4:03 + MP3 $0.99
7. Wrong Side Of Town 3:52 + MP3 $0.99
8. Patiently Wait 3:19 + MP3 $0.99
9. I May Be A Lover 6:07 + MP3 $0.99
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Album Notes

What Folks are saying about ' Never Shed No Tears'

'Tom Savage's Never Shed No Tears wins the prize as the surprise of the year thus far. First time through, I shrugged. Second time, I heard some things I liked. Third time, more. I'm on the tenth or eleventh listen now and it's at the top of my preferred listening stack. How it got there is a mystery. It's not the style, because I haven't quite figured out what it is yet. It doesn't seem like anything new, but with a voice somewhere between Mark Knopfler, Bruce Springsteen and Steve Young and a writing style which picks influences by the line instead of the song, Savage somehow put together one hell of an album without allowing himself to be pigeonholed. Folk? Yes. Rock? Yes. Folk rock? Yes. Good? Yes. Damn good? Yes, yes and yes.

Favored tracks at this moment (and they change with each hearing) are Beneath the Rocks with its Knopfler-esque vocals and guitar break (great twang and way too short), The State We're In which has slight touches of 70s Brit-rockers Home and a very slight nod toward Pink Floyd on The Wall with screaming folk harmonica on the break. Hang Your Head and Cry could very well be what Phil Ochs might be doing if he'd not passed on, its theme the simple shame that some politicians bring to an otherwise proud nation. Savage even stretches himself toward jazz with Wrong Side of Town, the guitar sounding as if it could have been taken from an early Steely Dan album.

Throughout the album, I hear ghosts of John Campbell, Knopfler, Springsteen, Steve Young and shades of newer artists who, while not well known, have their moments of musical greatness. They are the ghosts in my own head, though, for it becomes more obvious with each listen that Savage writes and performs what he has to, not what he hears. Such is of what the good ones are made.

A big huzzah to Geoff Chown for hearing what Savage had to offer, to the various musicians who added their little bits which made the whole as good as it is, and to Tom Savage himself who has found his voice, and I am not referring to that which emanates from his throat. What a voice it is.'

- Frank Gutch Jr., Folk and Acoustic Music Exchange



'Kingston-based singer/songwriter Tom Savage's third CD, Never Shed No Tears is steeped in the folk tradition of Dylan and Nebraska-era Springsteen. Tasty Celtic touches like the flute work by harmony vocalist Vanessa Longul(Savage's partner in life and music) , and Zeke Mazurek's violin sweeten Savage's weary, resigned vocal style. While this CD features fine songwriting throughout, highlights include the title track and Wrong Side of Town which could almost be called 'Bossa Folka'; for its Latin feel in the guitar and percussion. It's the blending of the folk idiom with those extra international accents that makes this one stand out above the usual folk fare.',

-Dave Clarke, Scene Magazine


'He might be no relation to ECHO sex columnist Dan Savage, but Tom Savage is equally adept at raising the hair on the back of one's neck - albeit for purely musical reasons. Probably best described as a poor man's Bruce Springsteen - which is far more of a compliment than it might seem in print..Ironically enough, the album by the same name features a few vintage Savage tear-jerkers, along with his trademark politically-informed ballads.'

-Declan Kelly, Echo Weekly

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