The Reverend Horton Heat: 25 to Life [Box]

Audio Samples

>East Steak
>Big Little Baby
>Loaded Gun
>One Time for Me
>Five-O Ford
>Liquor, Beer & Wine
>I Can't Surf
>Entertainer, The
>It's Martini Time
>Cowboy Love
>Now, Right Now
>Pride os San Jacinto
>Jimbo Song
>Sue Jack Daniels
>Spend a Night in the Box
>Girl in Blue, The
>Party in Your Head, The
>What's Reminding Me of You
>Loco Gringos Like a Party
>Like a Rocket
>Galaxy 500
>Callin' In Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>I'm Mad
>Big Little Baby
>400 Bucks
>Devil's Chasing Me, The
>Big Sky
>Baddest of the Bad
>It's Martini Time
>Please Don't Take the Baby to the Liquor Store, The
>Jimbo Wallace Introduction
>Jimbo Song
>Spend a Night in the Box
>Callin' In Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>Psychobilly Freakout
>Where In the Hell Did You Go with My Toothbrush
>Big Red Rocket of Love, The
>Party in Your Head, The
>What's Reminding Me of You
>Loco Gringos Like a Party
>Like a Rocket
>Galaxy 500
>Callin' in Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>Bullet
>I'm Mad
>Big Little Baby
>Loaded Gun
>400 Bucks
>Devil's Chasing Me, The
>Big Sky
>Baddest of the Bad
>It's Martini Time
>Please Don't Take the Baby to the Liquor Store
>Death Metal Guys
>Jimbo Song
>Spend a Night in the Box
>Galaxy 500
>Callin' In Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>Psychobilly Freakout
>Where the Hell Did You Go with My Toothbrush
>Bales of Cocaine
>Big Red Rocket/Folsom Prison Blues

Track List

>East Steak
>Big Little Baby
>Loaded Gun
>One Time for Me
>Five-O Ford
>Liquor, Beer & Wine
>I Can't Surf
>Entertainer, The
>It's Martini Time
>Cowboy Love
>Now, Right Now
>Pride os San Jacinto
>Jimbo Song
>Sue Jack Daniels
>Spend a Night in the Box
>Girl in Blue, The
>Party in Your Head, The
>What's Reminding Me of You
>Loco Gringos Like a Party
>Like a Rocket
>Galaxy 500
>Callin' In Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>I'm Mad
>Big Little Baby
>400 Bucks
>Devil's Chasing Me, The
>Big Sky
>Baddest of the Bad
>It's Martini Time
>Please Don't Take the Baby to the Liquor Store, The
>Jimbo Wallace Introduction
>Jimbo Song
>Spend a Night in the Box
>Callin' In Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>Psychobilly Freakout
>Where In the Hell Did You Go with My Toothbrush
>Big Red Rocket of Love, The
>Party in Your Head, The
>What's Reminding Me of You
>Loco Gringos Like a Party
>Like a Rocket
>Galaxy 500
>Callin' in Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>Bullet
>I'm Mad
>Big Little Baby
>Loaded Gun
>400 Bucks
>Devil's Chasing Me, The
>Big Sky
>Baddest of the Bad
>It's Martini Time
>Please Don't Take the Baby to the Liquor Store
>Death Metal Guys
>Jimbo Song
>Spend a Night in the Box
>Galaxy 500
>Callin' In Twisted
>Indigo Friends
>Psychobilly Freakout
>Where the Hell Did You Go with My Toothbrush
>Bales of Cocaine
>Big Red Rocket/Folsom Prison Blues

Album Notes

Liner Note Author: The Reverend Horton Heat.

Photographers: Drew Reynolds ; Robert Knight ; Josh Lewis; Michael Lavine; James Bland; Geoff Graham; Caitlin Muscat; Amiee Herrington; Jon Grass; Lisa K Stomprud.

In 1985, Jim Heath, a guitar player from Dallas who liked classic blues, rockabilly, and the Cramps, began playing gigs under the stage name the Reverend Horton Heat after a friend decided he needed a new stage persona. More than 25 years later, Heath is still making the most of his alter ego, headlining up to 150 shows a year where he tears up the stage for a loyal fan base. If Heath isn't quite the demonic force he was when he first exploded onto the national stage in the early '90s, he's still one of the very best guitarists on the roots rock scene, capable of blazing speed and slashing impact while maintaining a fluid dexterity and surprisingly graceful melodic sense that gives each of his flurries of notes a life of their own, and his rhythm section (Jimbo Wallace on upright bass and Paul Simmons on drums) can run rings around nearly anyone in rock & roll. In 2010, the Reverend Horton Heat played a string of dates to celebrate 25 years of hot-wired rockabilly mayhem, and 25 to Life was recorded during the San Francisco date of that tour; it's also the first live album Heath and Company have released after all those years together. The set list spans the breadth of Heath's career, from the A-side to the first Reverend Horton Heat single ("Big Little Baby") to a new and previously unreleased tune ("Please Don't Take the Baby to the Liquor Store"), and in the absence of a cross-licensed Greatest Hits package, 25 to Life does a better job than any album to date of charting the path of his musical vision. You may not need the bass and drum solos as part of a definitive study of the Reverend Heat's music, but the song selection skims the cream from his back catalog, and the band attacks this music with a crowd-pleasing vigor and impressive enthusiasm. Most bands don't sound this hot in their salad days, let alone after 25 years on the road, and 25 to Life not only affirms Jim Heath's status as one of the best rock guitarists at work today, but confirms he's a hell of a showman who isn't about to let an audience go home disappointed. ~ Mark Deming



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