Blue Rain
豆瓣 
      简介
Eric Andersen has never been one for standing still. His  restless travels from continent to continent, from innocence to experience,  have shaped his songs into cinematic vignettes of troubled love and  existential unease simmering in a dark and haunting blend of folk, blues,  jazz and other roots music.
For the first-ever live album in his career, which encompasses more than  forty years and over two dozen albums, singer-songwriter Eric Andersen  chose to enlist a Norwegian blues band to help shake off the "acoustic  troubadour" tag he outgrew long ago and to give his songs "a new, different  kind of edge." "Blue Rain," recorded at an Oslo club in June 2006, focuses  mostly on Andersen compositions dating back to the title song of his 1972  masterwork, "Blue River," presented in elegantly brooding electric  arrangements.
Andersen is hardly a blues novice. He's covered or written blues songs as  far back as his first album in 1965, and half of his 2000 CD, "You Can't  Relive the Past," was recorded with hardcore North Mississippi bluesmen.  But he's wise enough to avoid contorting his material on "Blue Rain" into  standard 12-bar format - he takes care of the genre's traditions with a  raucous rendition of Jimmy Reed's "Shame, Shame, Shame," and a slow-burning  take on "Losing Hand," first popularized by Ray Charles.
Eric's own songs, and the version of Fred Neil's "The Other Side of This  Life" that opens the CD, are hypnotically well-served by Andersen's gruff  but sensuous baritone, the hovering tremolo of his electric guitar, and the  support of three-fourths of Norway's Spoonful of Blues band. Despite only  one previous performance and a few rehearsals together, Andersen and the  Spoonful musicians fit together seamlessly - the noir-ish intimacy and ache  of songs like "The Blues Keep Falling Like the Rain," "Trouble in Paris"  and "Sheila" are retained and enhanced by Morten Omlid's alternately spiky  and coiling guitar and the unobtrusive push of the rhythm section. The  volume climbs on the torrid "Runaway" and the muscular, seething take on  "You Can't Relive the Past" (a Lou Reed co-write) that closes the CD, and  Andersen, Omlid and guest Scandinavian bluesman Vidar Busk all contribute  stinging guitar solos to "Losing Hand." Andersen varies the mood by playing  piano on two tracks, including "Don't It Make You Wanna Sing the Blues," a  previously unrecorded original ballad.
"Blue Rain" proves conclusively that there's more than one way to sing the  blues - Andersen himself describes the CD as "bluesy folk-soul," which  perfectly captures its essence.
tracks
The Other Side of This Life
The Blues Keep Fallin' Like the Rain
Trouble in Paris
Runaway
Don't It Make You Wanna Sing the Blues
Sheila
Goin' Gone
Losing Hand
Shame, Shame, Shame
Blue River
You Can't Relive the Past