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Cold Fact

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Cold Fact

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4.5 out of 5 stars Based on 8 Customer Ratings

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"Great music"
5 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

How great to discover this musician again. Easy to listen to his music.

"FANTASTIC"
5 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

Absolutely fantastic quality and condition. Original soundtrack, but digitally remastered to make sound clearer. CD arrived the day after I ordered it. Awesome awesome awesome. :-)

"Amazing"
5 stars"

This is truly an amazing album. I have been listening to Rodriguez since the early 80's and am so glad he is finally getting the recognition he deserves. Highly recommended.

Description

There was a mini-genre of singer/songwriters in the late '60s and early '70s that has never gotten a name. They were folky but not exactly folk-rock and certainly not laid-back; sometimes pissed off but not full of rage; alienated but not incoherent; psychedelic-tinged but not that weird; not averse to using orchestration in some cases but not that elaborately produced. And they sold very few records, eluding to a large degree even rediscovery by collectors. Jeff Monn, Paul Martin, John Braheny, and Billy Joe Becoat were some of them, and Sixto Rodriguez was another on his 1970 LP, Cold Fact.

Imagine an above-average Dylanesque street busker managing to record an album with fairly full and imaginative arrangements, and you're somewhat close to the atmosphere. Rodriguez projected the image of the aloof, alienated folk-rock songwriter, his songs jammed with gentle, stream-of-consciousness, indirect putdowns of straight society and its tensions. Likewise, he had his problems with romance, simultaneously putting down (again gently) women for their hang-ups and intimating that he could get along without them anyway (“I wonder how many times you had sex, and I wonder do you know who'll be next” he chides in the lilting “I Wonder”).

At the same time, the songs were catchy and concise, with dabs of inventive backup: a dancing string section here, odd electronic yelps there, tinkling steel drums elsewhere. It's an album whose lyrics are evocative yet hard to get a handle on even after repeated listenings, with song titles like “Hate Street Dialogue,” “Inner City Blues” (not the Marvin Gaye tune), and “Crucify Your Mind” representative of his eccentric, slightly troubled mindset. As it goes with folk-rock-psych singer/songwriters possessing captivating non sequitur turns of the phrase, he's just behind Arthur Lee and Skip Spence, but still worth your consideration.

Track Listing:

Disc 1:
  1. Sugar Man
  2. Only Good for Conversation
  3. Crucify Your Mind
  4. Establishment Blues
  5. Hate Street Dialogue
  6. Forget It
  7. Inner City Blues
  8. I Wonder
  9. Jane S. Piddy
  10. Gommorah (A Nursery Rhyme)
  11. Rich Folks Hoax
  12. Like Janis
Release date Australia
June 1st, 2012
Artist
Brand
Album Length (Minutes)
31:39
Label
Light In The Attic Records
Number of Discs
1
Original Release Year
1970
Box Dimensions (mm)
142x125x10
UPC
826853003629
All-time sales rank
Top 5000
Product ID
20641750

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