ARTIST: Ellis Paul TITLE: American Jukebox Fables LABEL: Philo / Rounder Records GENRE: Folk TIME: 55:14 min SIZE: 78,0 MB RIP DATE: Apr-26-2005 RELEASE DATE: Apr-05-2005 Track List: 01. Blacktop Train 04:46 02. Kiss The Sun (A Song For Pat Tillman) 04:02 03. Take All The Sky You Need 04:17 04. Time 02:31 05. Goodbye Hollywood 04:46 06. Marc Chagall 04:05 07. Jukebox On My Grave 03:39 08. Home 04:16 09. Alice's Champagne Palace 04:24 10. She Was 03:52 11. Bad, Bad Blood 04:40 12. Mystified 04:43 13. Clarity 05:13 Release Notes: Imagine songs in the populist, topical tradition of Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger set to the soundscapes of Moby-style electronica. Not all of Ellis Paul's first album in three years offers such an aural adventure, but the opening track, "Blacktop Train," combines propulsive syncopation, synthesized punctuation, and an ethereal female vocal that take the music far from folk convention, while "Kiss the Sun (A Song for Pat Tillman)" sets acoustic guitar to a digital pulse. In the centerpiece that passes for a title track, the veteran New England troubadour asks for a jukebox instead of a headstone on his grave, evoking a litany of inspirations that extend from Hank Williams and George Jones to Marvin Gaye and Joni Mitchell. Though Paul's reedy vocal remains relentlessly earnest, and his lyrics can get a little precious ("Time is a bird that can't be caged"; "I want to paint your world like Marc Chagall"), the inventive arrangements and buoyant melodies help lighten the artistic load.