Tuesday 18 Jun
 
 

New Zoo revue

As the bitter battle over management of the Zoo Amphitheatre played out in public last summer, Oklahoma City music fans may have worried whether the outdoor venue at 2011 N.E. 50th would be open for business this summer.
06/12/2013 | Comments 0

Howard stern

Music always has been in Howard Pollack’s blood — maybe not onstage, but definitely behind the scenes.
06/12/2013 | Comments 0

Graves encounters

Shakey Graves with Wild Child and Marmalakes
10:30 p.m. Thursday
The Blue Door
2805 N. McKinley
bluedoorokc.com
524-0738
$15
06/12/2013 | Comments 0

Vulgar incident

Vulgar Fashion with Depth & Current and Quilted Cherry Podium
8 p.m. Friday
Opolis
113 N. Crawford, Norman
opolis.org
820-0951
free
06/12/2013 | Comments 0

Music Made Me: Laura Leighe

Boyz II Men, II (1994)
I believe this was the first CD that I bought with my own allowance at Duncan’s local music store. It’s another really fun, soulful album — vocally, harmonically, musically outstanding. I remember lying on my bedroom floor and studying the lyrics, mesmerized for hours. I loved the singles, but my favorites were the opening track, “Thank You,” and the last track, their gorgeous, soul-grabbing rendition of The Beatles’ “Yesterday.” I was just learning about harmony at the time, and loved listening to their rich, thick, beautiful sound.
06/11/2013 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · CDs · Country · Chad Sullins and the Last Call...
Country

Chad Sullins and the Last Call Coalition — Incommunicado


Joshua Boydston July 25th, 2012  

Just a few minutes into Incommunicado, it becomes painfully obvious that Oklahoma native Chad Sullins knows his Red Dirt, country, classic rock and blues, and he blends them into the perfect barn-party soundtrack. The album plays like The Hangover set in Stillwater instead of Vegas, with all the emotions, amusement and reflections therein.

With clear-cut single “Thank God for Jack Daniels,” Sullins positions himself somewhere between Stoney LaRue and Eric Church, executing the whiskey tribute with all the subtlety — and admitted fun — of a Michael Bay film after a charming, vintage-Western introduction.

He leads into that some good-ol’-boy politicking in the blistering, if familiar “Straight to Hell.” Sullins makes a 180 in “Paris” and “Only Girl,” showing that he can do dreamy country ballads with the best of them, subsequently launching into the classic-rock anthem “Full Throttle,” which bleeds away like the protagonist riding his hog off into the sunset.

Yes, Sullins is more than satisfactory at all the cornerstones of Red Dirt and country, but he really excels when he steps off that platform into more woolly territory, like he does in the closing pair of “Dance with the Gypsys” and “Oklahoma Moon.” While the big anthems are more immediately accessible (like “Jack Daniels”), tracks like this find him excelling artistically in a far more rewarding way.

Regardless, Incommunicado is a well-produced good time, one well worth the hangover. —Joshua Boydston

 
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