Sunday, December 20, 2009

New Acoustic LP "Fulton Avenue" Breaks Ground; With Impressive Singing, Skilled Musicianship and Expert Songwriting, Frank Lee Sprague has Crafted a Work for the Ages

Known for his arresting adeptness to amalgamate accurate bedrock ‘n’ cycle styles into his own West Texas imprint, Frank Lee Sprague’s plan has wowed reviewers in Rolling Stone, Playboy, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, and abounding added magazines and newspapers.

-- You can’t assort Frank Lee Sprague unless it’s to say that his music is consistently authentic and consistently passionate. He is a adept of abounding styles and abounding genres. Those accustomed with his bedrock ‘n’ cycle recordings apperceive that he mixes rockabilly and cream and British Invasion-style music into a different West-Texan stew. And yet he moves so fast you can’t pin him down. Now, afterwards two powerful, awful acclaimed Merseybeat themed albums, Frank explores addition ancillary of his aptitude on the superb, Fulton Avenue.

Although Fulton Avenue is acoustic-based, it is appreciably affluent in song structure, with nuanced capacity both musically and lyrically. Each song claims its own affection and yet fits calm seamlessly.

“Another World” leads off the album. It’s a soft, sweet, blow of a song with a aerial acoustic advance breach and a balmy melody that will accomplish you abutting your eyes and hum along.

“Anaheim Girls” takes a cornball attending aback to the year 1971 and yet its lyrics acrylic a glimpse of innocent adolescence in a way we all chronicle to.
Known for his admirable ballads, Frank includes several complete beauties on Fulton Avenue.

“All Too Well,” with its admiring melody, aggregate choir and attenuate bang is a classic, the affectionate of song Paul McCartney and Brian Wilson already wrote and we hardly apprehend today.

“So Long Ago” appearance one of the album’s best and a lot of abnormal arrangements. The song begins with additional acoustic guitar and a stark, pain-filled articulate and again builds with a active cello abetment and an accordion activity as an organ.

A chic and acutely addictive instrumental, “The Devil’s Joke,” begs to serve as a cine theme. Listen up, Hollywood!

Every Frank Lee Sprague album includes songs that complete like automated top-ten smashes. On Fulton Avenue, aboriginal best would accept to be “Mixed Up,” a anesthetic sitar-laced consciousness-expanding production, featuring a anesthetic melody that will accept you abiding to the song over and over again.

The album able ends with “Turning My Back on You,” an impossibly addictive Beatles-flavored absolutely acoustic number. You’ll affirm Paul and George sing backup.

As with any Frank Lee Sprague album, the appearance isn’t over yet! First we’re advised to Frank’s admirable arrangement of Art Garfunkel’s, “Second Avenue”, actuality adapted to “Fulton Avenue,” area Frank lived for abounding years.

As an added gift, Frank includes two added benefit tracks. No toss-offs, they are amazing in their own right. “If Mary,” has a august mid-sixties Beach Boys feel, while “It Won’t Help” reinvents George Harrison’s accelerate guitar about 1970 and has all the earmarks of a ability pop classic. Don’t discount to stick about for a bastard aiguille at the abounding Frank Lee Sprague’s next album!

Fulton Avenue is wondrous, acutely acquainted art. With absorbing singing, accomplished musicianship and able songwriting, Frank Lee Sprague has crafted a plan for the ages.

Known for his arresting adeptness to amalgamate accurate bedrock ‘n’ cycle styles into his own West Texas imprint, Frank Lee Sprague’s plan has wowed reviewers in Rolling Stone, Playboy, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, and abounding added magazines and newspapers. He has appeared on CBS civic television and National Public Radio, and has performed abide about the world, including several acknowledged tours of Japan. With two Merseybeat-style albums beneath his belt, he will accomplish abide at the Cavern Club in Liverpool in 2006.

Now accessible at Amazon.com and Frank Lee Sprague.com

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