This is Black Stone Cherry's RSD album. The band really likes it. Black Stone Cherry

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2025

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
18.04.2025

Label: Mascot Records

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Hard Rock

Interpret: Black Stone Cherry

Das Album enthält Albumcover

Coming soon!

Danke, dass Sie sich für dieses Album interessieren. Sie können das Album noch nicht kaufen. Dafür schon mal reinhören!
Tipp: Nutzen Sie unsere Merkliste-Funktion.

  • 1 American Horse (feat. John Cooper of Skillet and Ayron Jones) 03:43
  • 2 Out Of Pocket (feat. Jesse Leach) 03:09
  • 3 What's Love Got To Do With It 03:19
  • 4 Give Me One Reason (The Plug) (Acoustic) 03:34
  • 5 Have You Ever Been Lonely 03:46
  • 6 I Miss You 03:25
  • 7 When The Pain Comes (Live) 03:39
  • 8 Peace Is Free (feat. Lzzy Hale) (Acoustic) 04:00
  • 9 Again (Live from Skydeck) 03:56
  • 10 Lonely Train (Live from Hellfest) 05:35
  • 11 Blame It On The Boom Boom (Live from Hellfest) 04:27
  • 12 White Trash Millionaire (Live from Hellfest) 03:31
  • Total Runtime 46:04

Info zu This is Black Stone Cherry's RSD album. The band really likes it.

Mascot Records is proud to announce the new album from Black Stone Cherry entitled, 'This is Black Stone Cherry's RSD Album. The band really likes it.' This collection includes b-sides, covers, live tracks, and previously un-released songs taken from the band's expansive discography, available now together for the first time on CD. American Horse (feat. John Cooper of Skillet and Ayron Jones):Out Of Pocket (feat. Jesse Leach of Killswitch Engage):What's Love Got To Do With It (Tina Turner Cover):Give Me One Reason (The Plug) (Tracy Chapman Cover):Have You Ever Been Lonely:I Miss You :Side B::When The Pain Comes (Live):Peace Is Free (Acoustic - Live from Skydeck feat. Lzzy Hale of Halestorm):Again (Live from Skydeck):Lonely Train (Live - Hellfest 2024):Blame It On The Boom Boom (Live - Hellfest 2024):White Trash Millionaire (Live - Hellfest 2024):

Some of these songs were previously released as bonus tracks taken from deluxe configurations of BSC’s catalogue. Other tracks are previously unreleased live recordings. Side A contains the studio tracks (bonus tracks, B-sides, Cherryfied covers of The Cult, Tina Turner and Tracy Chapman, plus guest vocals from Ayron Jones, John Cooper (Skillet), Jesse Leach (Killswitch Engage), and Lzzy Hale (Halestorm). Side B has the live tracks. This is the first time that all of these tracks will be available in one physical collection.

We are so honoured and excited to finally have something to offer as a special Record Store Day Release! As vinyl lovers, collectors, and ambassadors for any local record shop out there, this is something we have wanted to do for many years. We have put an incredible collection of songs together for this. Some live, some collaborations, some unreleased! We hope you like it! As the title says, we really do!”

"Kentucky rockers Black Stone Cherry would probably have liked to be Lynyrd Skynyrd. Or maybe Aerosmith. Maybe even Whitesnake. Likely an amalgam of all three. But they weren't. They only started this century. This did not stop them. They’ve built a successful career walking in those footsteps. While I sometimes go along with their haters, I’m also very aware that when lame guitar farts who imitate other types of music – The Kinks, The Beatles, The Stooges, Can, various post-punk outfits, and so on – the media clambers right up their rectums. Black Stone Cherry isn’t my bag but I like the album title. It’s an odds’n’ends compilation that ranges across one-off covers, such as of Tina Turner’s “What’s Love Got to Do With It”, The Cult’s “American Horse “ and Tracy Chapman’s “Give Me One Reason”, plenty of live cuts, unreleased material, such as a new version of “Out of Pocket”, featuring Killswitch Engage’s Jesse Leach, acoustic versions, and more. For those who want a well-curated grab-bag of committed, metal-tinged retro heavy rock, it’ll make a decent dipper." (Thomas H Green, theartsdesk.com)

Black Stone Cherry
Guests:
Ayron Jones, vocals
John Cooper, vocals
Jesse Leach, vocals
Lzzy Hale, vocals




Black Stone Cherry
A decade ago, Black Stone Cherry made its attention-grabbing self-titled debut at David Barrick's Barrick Recording near their hometown of Edmonton, KY. It proclaimed the arrival of a vibrant and exciting new force in Southern rock 'n’ roll, a group that played with fire, sang with brimstone and had plenty of cajones -- what other young band, after all, is willing to take on something as iconic as the Yardbirds' "Shapes of Things" on its first album?

Flash forward nine years and the BSC crew -- still guitarists Chris Robertson and Ben Wells, bassist Jon Lawhon and drummer John Fred Young -- found themselves back at Barrick, which had relocated and modernized a bit during the intervening years, although its analog mixing board hails from EMI's legendary Abbey Road studios in London. This was hardly the same group of fresh-faced rock nubiles that made the BLACK STONE CHERRY album, either; they'd traveled hundreds of thousands of miles on six continents, written scores more songs and even jousted a bit with the industry. They're family men and homeowners, too -- still rockers to the core but well aware of the "real world" outside the tour bus. So they came into KENTUCKY –- the quartet’s first release for Mascot Records -- more seasoned, battle-savvy and focused, ready to come back home and turn everything they'd learned into a set of ambitious and fearless new music.

"There's all this freedom because it's just us producing it this time," says Robertson. "We're doing it like we did that first one; people still rave about that record, our fans do. But a decade later we're all older, more mature. We all feel like better musicians and songwriters. But even though we're older now it's got a certain element of youth about it that you just can't escape. It's the most interesting album we've done thus far.”

Young adds that, "Man, it was perfect, the experience of getting to record here at home, being with our families, having the opportunity to record with David Barrick again and with all that amazing gear he has. You can never really go back to, 'Oh, I'm 17 again. I don't know how to perfectly tune a guitar or hit the perfect drum lick.' But you can mix some of that into what you are now. We just had a blast and didn't hold anything back.”

Then again, BSC is hardly known for restraint, something anyone who's seen the group blaze through any of its live shows can attest to. The story starts on June 4, 2001, in Edmonton, KY, when Robertson and Young, musical playmates since they were teens, were joined by Wells and Florida transplant Lawhon. Encouraged by musician relatives (Young's dad Richard and uncle Fred are two of the Kentucky HeadHunters), the fledging troupe cut its musical teeth at the Practice House, a 1940s bungalow -- pictured on the cover of KENTUCKY -- that had been relocated to a remote field by Young's grandparents. Used first by the HeadHunters and then BSC - its walls covered with posters, concert tickets and other memorabilia - it was as much of a learning space as the high school the four attended.

"We'd go there and sit and smoke cigarettes and jam on Nirvana and AC/DC, Skynyrd songs and Pantera, try to play Led Zeppelin songs," Young remembers. "It was perfect, man. The closest neighbor was, like, more than a mile away, so we could make as much noise as we wanted, any time we wanted. It was a great way to become a band."

After releasing the independent “Rock N’ Roll Tape” demo, BSC's burgeoning reputation got the group a label deal, and BLACK STONE CHERRY was followed by FOLKLORE AND SUPERSTITION, BETWEEN THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA and MAGIC MOUNTAIN, which spawned rock radio favorites such as "Lonely Train," "Blind Man," "White Trash Millionaire" and "Me and Mary Jane." The group's muscular style and homespun attitude connected particularly well overseas, where its last three albums hit No. 1 on the U.K. rock charts – MAGIC MOUNTAIN debuted Top 5 on the U.K. album chart overall - making that the perfect place to film and record the scorching concert souvenir "THANK YOU LIVIN' LIVE, BIRMINGHAM UK OCTOBER 30, 2014.

"For us it's realizing we're a live band -- that's where people are really sold on us and where we cut our teeth," says Wells. "So in writing the riffs and writing the songs for KENTUCKY, we had that in mind. We'd say 'OK, how is this gonna go over live in a festival setting? How is this gonna go over live in a club? Is this what our fans expect?' That was our whole mindset, just to get back to where we were when we first started and 'Let's not overthink this. Let's go in there and make the riffs cool and heavy. Let's just do it.’"

KENTUCKY does it from the get-go, letting loose with the meaty groove of the appropriately named "The Way of the Future," and fellow heavyweights such as "Shakin' My Cage," "Rescue Me," "Hangman" and the metallic "In Our Dreams," which was co-written with Bob Marlette (Alice Cooper, Rob Zombie, Seether, Saliva). “We wanted to write a song to show the struggle people faced in a situation of disparity, who when presented with danger and chaos could rise above the physical world and escape to another dimension of peace,” explains the band of “In Our Dreams.” The group's rendition of Edwin Starr's Motown classic "War," besides being eerily timely, features a full brass attack from Jonas Butler and Ryan Stiles, while "Soul Machine" shows that BSC knows how to get a deeply funky groove, complete with backing vocals by Sandra Dye and Toynnia Dye. "Long Ride," meanwhile, is a testament of devotion, whose anthemic chorus will have fists pumping into the air whenever the group pulls it out in concert.

"The songs came off more pure and not forced on this album," says Lawhon. "A lot of bands will get very political about things and be like, 'We need this kind of song' or 'We need this batch of songs for this part of our audience' and so on. With us, we just write. Once we feel like we've got the record, that's when we sit back and think about marketing angles and all that. The songs come first and foremost."

The emotional crucible of the album, meanwhile, comes via the wrenching "When Your Heart Breaks Down," a richly melodic co-write with former Shinedown guitarist Jasin Todd that takes stock of some of the costs that come with BSC's chosen life but also offers comfort to those left back home. "It's just about heartbreak and being a true rebel spirit at heart," explains Young. “We all knew the song was special, and when we were in the studio writing it Chris lost his grandpa, and he got pretty emotional when he was putting his vocal on it. It's a really wonderful song.”

BSC is particularly proud that KENTUCKY was not only made at home but also features a corps of hometown players adding their magic to the songs, including Chris Carmichael (strings), Paul Hatchett (organ), Chad Lockhart (vocals), Boone Frogget (vocals), and Andrea Tanaro (vocals). "This album IS Kentucky," Robertson says with palpably fierce pride. "Everyone who plays on it is from Kentucky. It's in their blood just like it's in ours, and they added so much to the record."

KENTUCKY will, of course, send BSC away from Kentucky and back to its second home on the road, with a fresh batch of songs Lawhon notes, "were meant to be played live." And it's key to remember that it's the same four guys playing it now as it was in Edmonton, when they were wet behind the ears and ready to put on some miles.

"It's cool we've been able to be the same four guys just doing it, putting out albums. You don't see that many bands who are the same members after all these years," says Wells. "We're friends first, and from the beginning it's always been four equals. That's what's kept us together. We're all in it, all on the team. It takes four of us to lead the band, not just one." And, Robertson adds, everyone in BSC shares the same credo.

"Music is life, life is music," he says. "It's faith, family and music. Those are the things that are quintessential for my life -- for all our lives."

Dieses Album enthält kein Booklet

© 2010-2025 HIGHRESAUDIO