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BREAK YOUR MOTHER'S HEART

Released: February 11, 2003

A thousand sad-eyed strummers studied the sacred texts of L.A.'s Class of '72: Neil Young's Harvest and Gram Parsons's GP. Writing and recording 30 years later in the same town, Tim Easton cribbed from that scene too, but his third solo disc echoes a much less commonly cited source: Jackson Browne. Though Easton's easy, affable vocal tone has always been a bit Browne-like, the similarity goes far beyond the superficial this time--not least because Easton enlisted the rich, relaxed backing of a cadre of SoCal session vets, each of whom played with Browne previously. Here, Jai Winding's Hammond organ animates the Eldridge Cleaver-inspired single "Poor, Poor LA," Greg Leisz's Dobro colors the dreamy "Amor Azul," Heartbreakers guitarist Mike Campbell adds depth and jangle to "Black Hearted Ways," and drum giant Jim Keltner and bassist Hutch Hutchinson keep the beats. Of course, none of that would matter if Easton's songs weren't simply so good.

-Anders Smith-Lindall

"Songs that are doubly blessed - with memorable musical nuances and a novelist's sense of humanity."
- Read more at Rolling Stone (4 stars)

"A special piece of work: No sophomore slump for this veteran performer."
- Read more at Billboard

"Stellar... His songs resolve around the moments of musical camaraderie that exist between broken hearts, introspective loners and dark nights that illuminate the soul."
- Chicago Sun-Times

"This album should be of great use to anyone who needs another fix of honest songwriting."
- Read more at PopMatters

"Classic... This is one solid CD. A little Tom Petty. A little Elliott Smith... Nothing contrived or gimmicky. Just good music."
- Palm Beach Post

"Easton allows his songs to slowly unfold, quietly and gracefully."
- The Washington Post

 

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