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Oliver Buck : Rust Belt Blues
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Critically-acclaimed troubadour country-rock, steeped in the blues.
Genre: Country: Americana
Release Date: 2007
Rust Belt Blues © Copyright-Oliver Buck
  • Buy CD - $9.97
  • Download Album (MP3) - $7.97
SPECIAL: 20% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Wreck Of The Old 97 2:46 $0.99
Troubadour Life 4:00 $0.99
Dark Hollow 2:55 $0.99
I've Been All Around This World 3:17 $0.99
How Long Has That Train Been Gone 2:57 $0.99
Road To Nowhere 4:35 $0.99
Mean Mama Blues 3:31 $0.99
Milwaukee 5:16 $0.99
Moonshiner 3:06 $0.99
Bessie Smith 4:09 $0.99
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Album Notes

Oliver Buck's songs reflect the universal themes of love, longing, and loss and channel hope and heartache in equal measure. Hope and heartache? He's from Cleveland. Having lived in places as far apart as Missoula, Montana and New York, Providence and Lawrence, Kansas, Buck also sings about American roads and homes imagined, all-too-real, and lost. Buck writes about people he's met (the inspiring and the unsavory), and also about his own personal struggles, tough choices, and ambitions as someone who has experienced life in the East Village, the Midwestern prairie, and the Rockies--and who finally returned to his Rust Belt hometown. Oliver Buck has appeared on club and festival bills with The Black Crowes, Keb' Mo', Los Lonely Boys, The Radiators, Leon Russell, Robert Randolph & the Family Band, Jason White, David "Honeyboy" Edwards, Eric Lindell, Fred Eaglesmith, The Slip, Will Hoge, Joe Bonamassa, Marc Ford, Grace Potter & The Nocturnals, and the Everybodyfields. Buck was selected to play at the 2008 North By Northeast (NXNE) Conference in Toronto, and was one of six national finalists in the 2007 Telluride Blues & Brews Festival Acoustic Blues Competition.

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REVIEWS

Oliver Buck's bio calls him part road dog and part music historian, that's a win
author: Johanna J. Bodde
Oliver Buck's bio calls him part road dog and part music historian, that's a winning combination! Another winning combination is a strong vocal accompanied by electric guitars on a solo-recording. Most singer-songwriters and basically everybody performing solo (pianists aside) pick up the acoustic guitar only. It wasn't until I saw Duane Jarvis play, all by himself, on a beautiful red electric guitar, that I realized that it could be done differently. I know that Nick Lowe is good at it too, but he always plays with a band. In the strong women category there's Barbara Manning, also playing her songs -solo- on an electric guitar. And now, out of the blue, came "Rust Belt Blues" by Oliver Buck. Ten excellent solo-tracks, originals, covers and traditionals, just Oliver's deep strong voice, his guitars (not only the acoustic!) and his electric bass. Out of the blue? Yep, I totally missed the excitement around alt-country band Percival. Oliver was the co-founder of this Kansas-based
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