Back To Artist
Joe Fournier : Dirt Road Joyride
Log in to add to your wishlist
Classic country, swampbucket blues and 2 minute pop
Genre: Country: Outlaw Country
Release Date: 2008
Dirt Road Joyride © Copyright-Joe Fournier
  • Buy CD - $15.00
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
SPECIAL: 10% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
The Wreck Of Tammy Whelan 3:18 $0.99
Real Cool Car 4:57 $0.99
I Drive A Wreck 2:55 $0.99
Bad Record Collection 3:55 $0.99
Gooned Up 4:15 $0.99
Stone Cold Hearts 3:41 $0.99
You're Still Everywhere 2:51 $0.99
Juanita Dog Walk 3:49 $0.99
Thumbful 2:49 $0.99
Sang Like A BIrd 3:30 $0.99
She's My Speed 3:45 $0.99
Bigger Than Actual Size 3:46 $0.99
preview all songs

Album Notes

Get ready for the latest roots rockin' rant from Joe Fournier - Dirt Road Joyride. This time Joe pulls out all the stops from hopped up bluegrass, full out power pop, twangy cajun waltzes, country soul and Rockpile influenced rock n' roll. With titles like I Drive A Wreck, Gooned Up, Juanita Dog Walk and Bigger Than Actual Size, you just know it's gonna live up to what the Halifax Daily News called Joe's music - a junkyard Bakersfield rant! Joe is a three-time Nova Scotia Music Awards nominee and ECMA favourite. His two previous discs, Raw Sugar Shed and Whiskey Stars, have been released both in the US and Europe and have earned enthusiastic reviews. He's shared stages with the likes of Fred Eaglesmith, Sarah Harmer, Tom Russell, Alabama 3 and Robbie Fulks... to name a few. In 2003 Joe was invited to London, England to play at the famed Borderline Club as part of their Americana Festival, which led to a multi album record deal in Europe. Joe will be out stompin' the boards all this year to get the word out. Expect shows filled with wry humoured, hook filled crowd pleasers. The boys in the band will try to keep up on doghouse bass, slide and dobro, mandolin, wacko percussion and anything else they can fit in the pickup.

Read more...

REVIEWS

Brilliant stuff, totally recommended
author: John Davy - Net Rhythms (UK)
In the beginning, rock and roll was all about youthful rebellion, exuberantly upsetting its olders and betters. These days, in as far as rock and roll can be discerned in youth music, it's pretty tame stuff - fun sometimes, but not likely to set the world alight. What a joy, then, to find older guys like Joe Fournier can use rock and roll as an entirely appropriate medium for songs that, lyrically, could easily be characterised as folk. Joe writes songs that come straight from life; vignettes, sometimes, and stories with longer time frames at others, but always truthful and always with immense good humour. Once I got to know the words (with the aid of the lyric sheet) I've listened to this album with an ear to ear grin, from beginning to end, and I just long to catch Joe at a gig sometime so I can sing along with the chorus of 'Gooned Up': 'Liquor and wine, wine and liquor/One'll get ya goin', but the other one's quicker/Yeah you end up regretting it everytime/Go-oo-oned up on liqu
Read more...
Canadian gives credence to Swedish label
author: David Cowling - AmericanaUK
This is the sort of music you expect to be delivered with every second or third hand truck, the more beat up the better. Take a rust-bucket, engine-knocking, exhaust blowing, tyre-whining beater, sell with this CD and instantly the prospective driver jams up the volume doesn’t notice the faults, signs on just to get the CD, foolproof. A mixture of John Fogerty and Jim White, underneath the bluster there is a genuine eye for detail and storytelling that doesn’t get in the way of a decent riff. As a calling card ‘The Wreck of Tammy Whelan’ is a slap in the face with a rolled up copy of ‘No Depression,’ we don’t need that sort of thing around here, we’ve got stripped down unpretentious music with a heart. A heart that serves up ‘Stone Cold Hearts’ a sepia toned paean to the golden age of Hank Williams and ‘You’re Still Everywhere’ Nick Lowe armed with a broken heart and a song as sharp as a broken beer bottle. ‘She’s My Speed’ is the type of thing Tom Petty can’t manage these days.
Read more...
Joe Fournier is the real deal
author: Frederick Turgis - www.jumpingfrom6to6.com
This is Joe Fournier’s fourth album and he plays almost all instruments on it, just helped for a couple of songs by a dobro and a fiddle player. Fournier simply plays American music with soul and sincerity, just a man, his roots and his songs. You’ll find some elements of John Fogerty here, an intonation of Bruce Springteen there a bit of blues and a good dose of Bakersfield everywhere. The songs are very well crafted with melodies that hook you from the start and perfectly written texts. You won’t find weird turn or words you never use in your everyday life, this are simple words straight from the heart, like his music. These are also the hardest to use but when you’re successful you come close to classics like Chuck Berry, John Fogerty or Dave Alvin. There’s also plenty of humour in his songs like “Bad Record Collection” in which Joe complains about his girl and her bad taste when it comes to music. With lyrics like “all that top 10 fluff goes to work on my libido/turns my kingbee t
Read more...