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Ditch Witch - Starvation Box FLAC album

Tracklist

1 Never Too Late To Run
2 Brick
3 Fake A Smile
4 Settle Down
5 Witness
6 Steal This Town
7 Everything
8 Pistol And Pen
9 Stomp
10 Less January

Companies, etc.

  • Recorded At – Catamount Recording
  • Mastered At – Masterdisk
  • Pressed By – Disctronics USA

Credits

  • Art Direction – Dave Birke
  • Bass, Vocals – Shannon Mercer
  • Drums, Art Direction – Brian Coughlin
  • Engineer – Assistant Engineer*
  • Guitar, Art Direction – Barry Hibdon
  • Mastered By – Andy VanDette
  • Producer, Engineer, Mixed By – Tom Tatman
  • Steel Guitar, Dobro – Mike Lemon (tracks: 6)
  • Viola – Saylor Craig (tracks: 6)
  • Vocals, Guitar – Chris Gebhardt
  • Written By, Performer – Ditch Witch

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (string): 601501303722
  • Barcode: 6 01501 30372 2
  • Matrix / Runout: 146479-2W1-6222-A DISCTRONICS USA ✻ 60150130372 ✻
  • Mastering SID Code: IFPI L791
  • Mould SID Code: IFPI 203C

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
60150-13037-4P Ditch Witch Starvation Box ‎(Cass, Album, Promo) Grass Records 60150-13037-4P US 1996


Ditch Witch - Starvation Box FLAC album

Musician performer: Ditch Witch

Title: Starvation Box

Country: US

Date of release: 1996

Style: Alternative Rock

Genre: Rock

Size FLAC: 1593 mb

Rating: 4.4 / 5

Votes: 550

Other Formats: WAV MP3 MP4 ASF XM DMF AUD

Related to Ditch Witch - Starvation Box FLAC Albums

spark
FINALLY. THESE GUYS have made the record I was in want of way back in '94 when Grass released 6 new originals and the rest being Faye singles. The group has seen some major changes. Barry Hibdon (guitars) remains to be the only surviving member. Now a quartet, Chris Gebhardt has taken over the vocals entirely. And a fine job he's done at that. Clear and focused make no mistake, Gebhardt's vocals are a perfect match for the band's Columbia, Missouri thunder. Not quite distinct mind you, you could say the vocals sound a lot like other singers, but a nice change from the previous gravely vocals of I think Hibdon (they should have done trade offs personally).I've had my eye on these guys for a LONG time now, back when "If I Lose," from their first single on Faye records - started out my mornings, every morning, for months. Somewhere between Superchunk and Son Volt. Unlike the watery minion of insurgent country bands out there these days just trying to cash in on the so-called latest fad; Ditch Witch are 100 proof straight up. But by making this LP so late when they where making this kind of music back in '91 may get them categorized as yet another entrant to the ever swelling "alternate-country" horde. The strength of this LP is the song craft and their ability to make the verse - chorus - verse formula work.The lyrics on this LP aren't all that memorable: "The ground you're on is not wrong if you can see on the other side..." but the fiery music is VERY catchy. The guitars - straight forward non-jangle power chords with some nice single string chord pluckin' filler and string bending a la Farrar and his mahogany Gibson SG. The new drummer, Brian Coughlin sounds great backed by Shannon Mercer on bass - the equation to the solution is aces.A friend of mine once told me when I was about to put on a record "the first song will tell you if it's gonna be any good." If you follow that logic here ("Never Too Late To Run") you're gonna be one happy toad.Turn Your stereo way up. Go ahead play it loud...
spark
FINALLY. THESE GUYS have made the record I was in want of way back in '94 when Grass released 6 new originals and the rest being Faye singles. The group has seen some major changes. Barry Hibdon (guitars) remains to be the only surviving member. Now a quartet, Chris Gebhardt has taken over the vocals entirely. And a fine job he's done at that. Clear and focused make no mistake, Gebhardt's vocals are a perfect match for the band's Columbia, Missouri thunder. Not quite distinct mind you, you could say the vocals sound a lot like other singers, but a nice change from the previous gravely vocals of I think Hibdon (they should have done trade offs personally).I've had my eye on these guys for a LONG time now, back when "If I Lose," from their first single on Faye records - started out my mornings, every morning, for months. Somewhere between Superchunk and Son Volt. Unlike the watery minion of insurgent country bands out there these days just trying to cash in on the so-called latest fad; Ditch Witch are 100 proof straight up. But by making this LP so late when they where making this kind of music back in '91 may get them categorized as yet another entrant to the ever swelling "alternate-country" horde. The strength of this LP is the song craft and their ability to make the verse - chorus - verse formula work.The lyrics on this LP aren't all that memorable: "The ground you're on is not wrong if you can see on the other side..." but the fiery music is VERY catchy. The guitars - straight forward non-jangle power chords with some nice single string chord pluckin' filler and string bending a la Farrar and his mahogany Gibson SG. The new drummer, Brian Coughlin sounds great backed by Shannon Mercer on bass - the equation to the solution is aces.A friend of mine once told me when I was about to put on a record "the first song will tell you if it's gonna be any good." If you follow that logic here ("Never Too Late To Run") you're gonna be one happy toad.Turn Your stereo way up. Go ahead play it loud...