Point Blank - Fight On!
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Published November 18 2009
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*=Staff's pick
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Down Not Dead*
Fight On!*
Deep Ellum Women*
Hit The Bottom*
Made Of Stone
My Soul Cries Out*
Big White Horse
Out Of Darkness
Cold Day In Hell
Undercover Lover*
Short Stack Of Blues
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Genre |
Southern Rock |
John O'Daniel
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Vocals
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Tracks |
11 |
Rusty Burns
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Guitar
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Runningtime |
54 Min. |
Mouse Mayes
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Guitar
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Label |
Dixie
Frog Records |
Phillip Petty
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Bass
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Release |
21 September 2009 |
David Crockett
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Drums
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Country |
USA |
Larry Telford
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Keyboard
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Similar artists |
The Outlaws,
Blackfoot, Molly Hatchet |
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Anybody remembers vintage southern rockers Point Blank?
Yepp, thought so. After way too many years of absence they finally re-united
and entered the stage of Sweden Rock Festival last year. When watching
the band deliver classic rockers like "Uncle Ned", "Bad
Bees", "Back In The Alley" and "Nasty Notions"
my smile just wouldn't stop growing. A tour followed and now the band
has finally released a new studio album.
My favourite period of the band was the first four albums;
"Point Blank", "Second Season", "Airplay"
and "The Hard Way" after which they became a bit too slick
and mainstream for my liking. I'm happy to say the return of the southern
gentlemen is closer to the early years than the later. Ok, it may not
be as dirty and rough as the vintage stuff, but that also has to do
with the recording qualities of today etc.
The edge is still there in tracks like "Down Not
Dead", "Fight On!", "Hit The Bottom", "Deep
Ellum Women", "Out Of Darkness", "Big White Horse",
"Undercover Lover" and "Short Stack Of Blues" (which
makes it most of the tracks, right?), while they show the softer side
in tracks like "Made Of Stone", the sweet instrumental "My
Soul Cries Out" with its great guitar harmonies and acoustic soloing
and my least favourite on the album, the sugar sweet "Cold Day
In Hell". Even though there are no riffs that give classics like
"Uncle Ned" or "Nasty Notions" a run for their money,
the song material is consistent and it's really good.
It's an easy listening album, very melodic but still with
a nice rough edge to it. It should appeal to both long lost fans and
a new crowd of southern rock fans. It's great to hear O'Daniel still
sings southern rock the way it's supposed to be sung. He still has enough
cohones and bluesy feel to pull it off with pride.
The same can be said about Rusty Burns guitar playing.
He plays with the same conviction, feel and power as ever! Old guitarists
don't fade away they just get longer beards! A nice return from a band
I had almost given up on!
Performance
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Originality
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Production
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Vocals
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Songwriting
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Summary
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