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Another Sleepless Night

David Serby

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1 The Most Reckless Thing David Serby 3:05 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Nobody Here By That Name David Serby 3:10 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 If That's What You Call Love David Serby 3:09 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 It Ain't a Party David Serby 3:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Somewhere You Once Lived David Serby 2:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Blame It On July David Serby 2:44 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 That Was the Old Me David Serby 3:29 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Whatever Happened to That Girl David Serby 2:54 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Easy to Forget David Serby 3:02 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Cocktails Napkins David Serby 2:52 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 You're Not Goin' Anywhere David Serby 3:57 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Six of One David Serby 3:49 $0.99 View In iTunes
13 Short Story Long David Serby 2:41 $0.99 View In iTunes
14 Don't Turn On the Light David Serby 3:57 $0.99 View In iTunes
15 We Don't Live Here Anymore David Serby 4:58 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

A natural born honky tonker, the Southern California-based David Serby establishes himself on his second album as a worthy heir to Dwight Yoakam's West Coast country crown. But where Yoakam dresses up his music with rhinestone-studded moves, Serby takes a more low-key approach, and his music winds up feeling more personal. On Another Sleepless Night, he focuses on the travails of marriage, the heartache of infidelity, and nagging memories of the past. The album starts off strongly with the big beat honky tonker, "The Most Reckless Thing." Like many a good country tunesmith, Serby gives the title phrase a good spin by initially stating that the "most reckless thing" he ever did was to marry before he turns "reckless" and squanders his marriage by leaving his wife crying at home "while I was out having fun." Sometimes on this disc he plays the scoundrel while at other times, however, he's the good husband (or at least attempting to be one). In "Nobody Here by That Name," he rebuffs calls from an old girlfriend and in the bluesy "I'm a Different Man Now," he asserts to his girl that he's sobered up and got a job — even though he once "took all of your money." He humorously boasts in "Somewhere You Once Lived" that "I ain't saying that I'm perfect/Or that I never lied/At least I was free/On our wedding night." This tune is one of several where the woman is cast as the marriage wrecker. "If That's What You Call Love," which sports a nifty Dave Edmunds-like guitar riff, has him discovering that his wife is trying to impress another man. Both "Blame on July" and "Don't Turn on the Light" finds him crying over his wife's wild ways, but Serby comes off as a blue-collar guy confiding to you in a bar. He uses his everyman persona to great effect in the chilling tale "You're Not Going Anywhere," in which he portrays an abusive man who takes violent revenge on his cheating girl. He comes off more sympathetic in another memorable crime story, "We Don't Live Here Anymore," where a desperate man breaks into the house that used to be his before the bank repossessed it. This noir-ish tale also spotlights another of disc's strengths, the solid play by Serby's supporting players. Producer/multi-instrumentalist Edward Tree whips out a fiery guitar solo on "We Don't Live" that reinforces the song's dangerous mood. Veteran Nashville drummer Billy Block, bassist Taras Prodaniuk (Dwight Yoakam, Lucinda Williams), and pedal steel stalwart Jay Dee Maness also help to give the disc a rugged roadhouse sound, but it's Serby who shines the brightest throughout this disc. His lived-in, laconic vocals, his sharp storytelling, and his classic county melodies all make Another Sleepless Night a superior set of timeless honky tonk music.

Recent Customer Reviews

Not Bad
     
by Shuck and Jive

...but not great. David sings with a thin, weak voice bordering on whining. The only thing that makes any of this listenable is the band. David is smart enough to know his limitations as a singer and he has surrounded himself with first-rate musicians who play well enough to distract from the weak vocals. I believe that you'll listen to these cuts once and then they'll gather dust. The material is just not interesting enough for repeated listening.

SHAMELESSLY COUNTRY, DAVID SERBY ROCKS HARD
     
by Happy Beckett

David Serby wears a cowboy hat and sings like Ricky Nelson, with the laconic phrasing of a man all too comfortable sweetly apologizing for bad behavior. He's a country gentleman with a whole lotta' love, so get over the bad behavior thing, cause the man behind that lying and cheating, charming character he plays on stage has more good character than that friend you can count on. But he might charm your date, while singing about giving up the whisky, or claiming that he'll never cheat again, or that he's a different man now, so buy the girl a corsage for the dance and fake a few moves on the dance floor, or you may just lose her heart to the band.


Ed Tree is a close friend of mine. I've never said more than hello to him, as far as I can remember, but I always sit close to the stage and I swear that he plays better when he knows I'll smile at the things he adds with that amazing guitar of his. At the end of a concert, I feel like I've had a conversation with a friend after watching Ed play. The band has a keyboard and occasionally an amazing violin in the mix, but when they are a four piece, Ed plays the feeling behind the lyrics with more heart and skill than anyone but Chet Atkins, Eric Clapton or Eddie Van Halen. The most important thing to know about a guitar solo, is that it fits the song, after that chops don't hurt, and taste is a great big plus. Ed is a close friend based solely on the dialogue from the stage to the front row, and I can sing the lyrics to his solos and he plays the feelings that come up at the right part of the song. He could bang out all the solos that Dickie Betts ever played for The Allman Brothers with authority, similar chops, and do it all while laughing at the kicks and gooses coming from the drums. All that and a bag of chips.


Gary Ferguson is the drummer from another mother that kicks the band straight where it helps and isn't afraid to keep time when that's what the music needs. I swear he can talk through his high hat, and he has the groove down to his shoes. On the slower march time numbers he is worth a careful listen, cause that's the downfall of most time keepers, and Gary pops the cymbals and taps the tom toms to accent the lyric to better effect than rim shots on the Tonight Show. He drives every song better than the Terminator in his famous Armored Range Rover, and is more fun to watch.


Taras Prodaniuk puts the country funk into the tank of this Cadillac, and can be heard in a featured role on "We Don't Live Here Anymore" making that fine vehicle purr down the road like Elvis' restored pink Caddie during the thin and musical days of the King. Taras pumped the Dwight Yoakum engine for a few years, so he'd no newbie at the filling station. When David's voice sounds a little closer than you're used to, that's Mr. Prodoniuk singing backing vocals. Always remember the bass player in any band, because he will know where the party is. Taras always brings his ax to the David Serby shindig, and without him the songs would be missing a driver, and a med vac full of heart would just be ice chips when it got to the hospital.

A song by song review of this album can be read at BillySheppard23

Another Sleepless Night, David Serby
View In iTunes
  • $9.99
  • Genres: Country, Music
  • Released: Mar 22, 2007

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