Tired of Being Alone
Editorial Reviews McFarland is no slouch himself at singing, not just playing, the blues, as he proves repeatedly here. While most modern blues seems to be mired in the guitar-store pyrotechnics of Kenny Wayne Shepherd and his brethren, Rico McFarland plays with genuine taste and feeling and isn't afraid to play a straight soul song or gospel. Tired of Being Alone is an album for fans of both B.B. King and Al Green, and that's a rare event. --Mike Johnson
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Rico McFarland is known to most modern blues fans primarily as the guitar slinger seen backing such legends as James Cotton and Lucky Peterson. With Tired of Being Alone, McFarland steps out on his own to deliver his take on where the blues stands in the new millennium. Enjoying the patronage of a few famous friends doesn't hurt, especially when those friends are Otis Clay and Syl Johnson. McFarland uses their prodigious talents to good effect on cover versions of "What If God Was One of Us" (Clay) and Al Green's "It Ain't No Fun to Me" (Johnson).
Tired of Being Alone, Music, Rico McFarland, Blues, Blues Music, Modern Electric Blues, Pop, Soul-Blues
Music:
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