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http://www.popmatters.com/pm/music/reviews/5738/lucero-rebels-rogues-sworn-brothers/LuceroRebels, Rogues & Sworn Brothers(Liberty and Lament)US release date: 26 September 2006UK release date: 26 September 2006by Stephen HaagLucero has quietly become the second-best roots rock band in America these days, trailing, by my scorecard, only the peerless Drive-By Truckers. And they’ve earned that slot honestly, touring incessantly and honing their Replacements-meets-Springsteen act to a fine point, with frontman Ben Nichols’ whiskey-soaked, aged-beyond-its-years vocals, the band’s chief calling card. Over the course of their last three albums—Tennessee, That Much Further West and Nobody’s Darlings—Lucero got tighter. But those albums sounded like Lucero was constantly re-making the same album—a kickass, honest alt-country album—but the same album nevertheless.
Maybe the band realized this, because for their latest, Rebels, Rogues & Sworn Brothers, they’ve added the perfect tweak to their formula and they’ve done it without sacrificing any of their “Lucero-ness”: the band has added a keyboard player, and the resulting fuller sound has moved Lucero into the upper echelon of Americana bands.
13 October 2006Related articles
Review: Lucero: Nobody's DarlingsJill LaBrack01.Sep.05Rock 'n' roll poetry finds a new voice. Lucero outdo themselves again.
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