
Shoestring Strap
Finest Qualities
© 2005 Shoestring Strap (634479235344)
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Listen On Up to this High Energy Good Time Hard Drinkin' Outlaw Mudgrass music that's guaranteed to tickle yer ears and move yer boots. Call it Alt-Country, Call it Outlaw Country, call it Americana.hell, just don't call it late for Last Call. Ya Heard?
tracks
- 1 My Seat at the Bar
- 2 Tongue Tied
- 3 Quicksand
- 4 Tijuana Jail
- 5 Hanging On
- 6 Struttin'
- 7 Through The NIght
- 8 Indian Summer
- 9 Jamie Girl
- 10 You Can't Hear Me
- 11 Rocky Mountain Lady
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Shoestring Strap
http://www.shoestringstrap.com
Also available on itunes:
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?playListId=126368410
Shoestring Strap played their first gig in June of 2004 as an acoustic bluegrass trio. Over 100 gigs and many stylistic twists and turns later they have become regulars in the San Diego music scene and beyond with their Kickass Outlaw Mudgrass sound. Places they have played include Winston’s and ‘Canes in San Diego, the Coach House in San Juan Capistrano, Sherwin’s Folly in Mammoth, Humboldt Brews and Six Rivers Brewery in Arcata, and the Bobolink and Ten Mile Tide Summer Explosion festivals.
Most of their original tunes revolve around familiar themes: drinking, Jesus, and forlorn love. Their sound is a rowdy combination of the slide of Brennan's steel guitar, the twang of Kent and Lowie singing their hearts out, Mark pounding on the drums like Animal and Keitho hunched over his mando like a man on a mission. It’s all mixed with lyrics that hit just a little too close to home.
2006 was a breakout year for Shoestring Strap. Along with playing an invite-only national horseshoe tournament as well as two festivals alongside such bands as Garaj Mahal, Zilla, and Ten Mile Tide, they were invited to L.A. to record their song "If Jesus Was Whiskey" for an upcoming independent film featuring William Shatner and Casey Kasem.
2007 will bring more festival appearances as well as their sophomore studio album release. Never satisfied to keep things as they are, Shoestring Strap is always pushing their sound in new directions and always writing songs, refining them by playing them live until all the parts fall into place perfectly.
Shoestring Strap will get you up and dancing, stomping your feet and clapping your hands like there's no tomorrow, so git on down to the show and Get Your Strap On!
reviews
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Less glitz and glam and more honesty, fun, and talent
author: San Diego Reader - OllieShoestring Strap is a blue jeans and camping-in-the-mountains band in sweatshirts and hats. Their sound ranges from the acoustic guitar, mandolin, and harmonized voices of bluegrass to the electric guitar, fiddle, and lonesome vocals of honky-tonk. If you couldn't tell the two apart, you wouldn't be interested in the album Finest Qualities. "Country" music is a taste not shared by all. Hell, even I can't stand that "Save a Horse, Ride a Cowboy" and "Honky Tonk Badonkadonk" puerile vomit they pass off as music on KSON. Shoestring is less glitz and glam and more honesty, fun, and talent, which may hurt them in the long run but makes them a damn better listen. And they are talented. Not one note is missed, fuzzy, or off on the entire album. They're tight and crisp with the timing and sophisticated with the riffs and beats. Although I don't think it would be out of place in the other tracks, "Tijuana Jail" is the first on the CD to feature the fiddle. It's about a man in the border town's clink. It sounds a little like Robert Earl Keen's "Road Goes on Forever," with a slower pace but just as catchy sing-along-with-us lyrics. It's not a rowdy party song but a bluesy lament. "Struttin' " is a hop-along country song about walking with a girl that has a pace to match its theme. A few of the songs are about leaving, loving, and the things we ought to do instead of the things we end up doing. One of the "leaving" songs is "You Can't Hear Me." It's a wintry, rainy-day, sad ballad and my favorite song on the album.