What people search:
 | Title : No Stranger to Shame
Author : Uncle Kracker
Release Date : 20020924
Binding : Audio CD
Regular Price : $18.98
Amazon.com Price : $13.49
(29
%) VISIT AMAZON.COM'S PAGE | Editorial Reviews : Uncle Kracker might have rap-rock numbskull Kid Rock to thank for putting him on the map, but with the release of his solid sophomore set, the Michigan mauler can stand up and take a bow. For not only is Uncle Kracker the most Southern-sounding musician ever to emerge from the edge of the Great Lakes, he's also one of the most versatile. As such, No Stranger to Shame is by turns country, rock, soul, blues, and sometimes a vigorous mix of the lot. The horn-section-goosing opening track 'I Do' is pure Stax with a little '70s-era thwacketa-thwacketa guitar menace; 'Thunderhead Hawkins,' with its drawling vocals and slide guitar, is pure Arkansas front-porch boogaloo; 'Memphis Soul Song' is just that; 'To Think I Used to Love You' could have been torn from the Merle Haggard songbook; and 'Keep It Comin'' is fierce hip-hop. A ballad, 'Letter to My Daughters,' is sweet if unnervingly sappy (think Bob Carlisle's 'Butterfly Kisses'), while Sugar Ray's Mark McGrath adds negligible freight to the title track. But No Stranger to Shame's finest moment is a borrowed one--a faithful cover of Dobie Gray's inspirational rock & roll love letter, 'Drift Away.' An underappreciated classic from the early '70s, 'Drift Away' still sounds relevant, and Kracker's soulful version--featuring Gray himself--will do much to spotlight that comforting old chestnut.
Buyer Reviews : No sophomore slump for Uncle Kracker! What an album! I was very dispappointed with 'Double Wide' because of the unevenness of the album. Not the case with 'No Stranger to Shame' This album has a little of everything and it works! One part blues, one part rap, one part pop, with a little jazz and a little bit of country thrown in for good measure.
The first single, 'In A Little While' has to be the most addictively delicious song on the radio right now, and it does have the distinction of being the standout song on the cd. But it has some tough compeition from 'Baby Don't Cry', 'I Wish I Had a Dollar', and 'I Do.' Kracker also does a beautiful cover of Dolby Gray's 'Drift Away' that stays true to the original.
A solid second album that will be in my cd player for quite some time to come. Highly recommended!
(by adgal74)
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