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Albert and Gage
Dakota Lullaby
The Songs of Tom Peterson
2009
ARTIST WEBSITE
ARTIST MYSPACE

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1. Dakota
Lullaby 5:09
2. Hell or High Water 3:13
3. Cuttin' a Rug 3:11
4. Say Yes to Love 3:17
5. Those Who Love 3:22
6. If I Die Tomorrow 4:46
7. Like a River Loves a Waterfall 3:19
8. True Love Knows 3:24
9. Tender Loving Care 4:02
10. Annie 3:05
11. Does She Have a Future with Me? 3:07
12. Goodnight Blues 4:24
All songs by Tom Peterson
Golly Gee Music (ASCAP) |
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Credits:
Produced by Chris Gage
Engineered and mixed by Chris Gage
at MoonHouse Studio, Austin Texas
Production and engineering assistance by Christine Albert
Additional recording by Boyd Bristow at Maxine Audio, Spearfish
South Dakota
Mastered by Jim Wilson at Airshow Mastering
Artwork and Design by Dick Reeves
Photo of Chris and Christine by Terry Smith
South Dakota photos by Chris Gage
Featuring:
Christine Albert - vocals
Chris Gage - vocals, electric, acoustic and baritone guitars, piano,
organ, dobro and tambourine
Kenny Putnam - fiddle
Mike Stevens - harmonica
Lloyd Maines - pedal steel
John Mills - saxophone
Michael Austin - clarinet
David Carroll - upright bass
Glenn Fukunaga - electric bass
Paul Pearcy - drums, percussion and wind
MH 2908
cp2009 MoonHouse Records
PO Box 41021 Austin, Texas 78704
www.moonhouserecords.com
www.albertandgage.com
All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable
laws. |
SkySea
The prairie isn’t really endless
Lives neither, just sometimes seems so
(buffaloes know both)
but songs are, TomPete’s go
like prairie seeds and tall grasses does
played over and over and again, different
played blizzardhard, sharptendered sprung,
stormpounded cathowled whole
rejuvenate, recreate, reincarnate,
these songs grow bloomsnblossoms,
‘n lifescents you haven’t met yet,
some bedrock solid,
some heaving stones forced up by heartfrosts
some shrugging shaggy sods off
like your notions you know all about,
songselves their own lifeforms,
some endangered, end-angered, stormed,
soaring feathered, fleet furred,
slithering coiled (is Truth poison?)
Original isn’t a
sin
Missing this music might
Missing herds and schools and sees and nows and
what-almost-did-never-be
Prairie came from
the Bottom
of the bluesblack ocean
as far as the heart can sea
© jack kreitzer 08 |
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Reviews:
Folk and
Acoustic Music Exchange
posted by Frank Gutch, Jr. 2009
A labor of love, that is what this is. Pure,
unadulterated labor of love. Prairie and plains might have something to
do with the music, but Dakota Lullaby is all
about the love: Tom Peterson's love of the Dakotas as well as Christine
Albert and Chris Gage's love of song. Remember the phrase "love conquers
all?" Well, if it didn't, Dakota Lullaby
wouldn't exist. Does the fact that it does give credence to the phrase?
For those who would like to think so, here is the story, Cliff's
Notes-style.
Thirty years ago, Tom Peterson, denizen of Pierre,
South Dakota, wrote songs. Lots of them, in fact. Chris Gage, young and
idealistic musician, began incorporating said songs into his act. Fast
forward 30 years. (I said it was Cliff's Notes, didn't I?) Gage
discovers a Peterson demo tape in his stash and Jack Kreitzer transfers
Tom Peterson demos onto a CD, sending it to Albert and Gage. "It didn't
take us long to realize that we had an entire album's worth of material
that was perfect for Albert and Gage," Albert writes in the liner notes.
A project is born.
READ MORE
HERE
MUSIC
ROAD Iposted by kerry dexter Sunday, June 14, 2009
The joyous side of love and the blue side, the thoughtful
side, and the funny one, the crazy bits of friendship and the thought
provoking ones, the quiet of a northern prairie night and the voices of
those who made history there --- you meet all these ideas in Dakota
Lullaby, the latest album from Christine Albert and Chris Gage. There
are a dozen songs on the disc, varying in melody from swing to folk to
country to blues, in tone from raucous to funny to reflective. Though
they are outstanding songwriters themselves, Albert and Gage didn’t
write the music on this collection. In fact, the songs were written some
thirty years ago.
READ
MORE HERE
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