Gift Horse (album)
Gift Horse is a studio album by the folk rock band Lost Dogs. It was released in 1999 on BEC Records.
Gift Horse | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 2000 | |||
Recorded | The Green Room (Huntington Beach, California) | |||
Genre | Roots music | |||
Label | BEC | |||
Producer | ||||
Lost Dogs chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic |
This turned out to be Gene Eugene's last album with the band, as he died in The Green Room shortly after its release. BEC Records retitled one song as "A Vegas Story" for the album's artwork. To this day, fans of the band continue to call it by its real name, "Free Drinks and a Dream". The song also goes by that name during concert performances and on later live albums and videos.
Track listing
- "Ghost Train (To Nowhere)" (Taylor) (4:38)
- "Free Drinks and a Dream (A Vegas Story)" (Taylor) (4:53)
- "If You Loved Here (You'd Be Home By Now)" (Taylor) (3:09)
- "Diamonds to Coal" (Taylor) (3:44)
- "A Blessing In Disguise" (Taylor) (4:37)
- "Loved and Forgiven" (Taylor) (4:47)
- "Rebecca Go Home" (Taylor) (4:03)
- "Honeysuckle Breeze" (Taylor) (2:56)
- "Ditto" (Taylor) (4:18)
- "The Wall of Heaven" (Taylor) (4:35)
- "Farther Along" (Traditional, Arranged by The Lost Dogs) (4:11)
Personnel
- Derri Daugherty — guitars and vocals
- Burleigh Drummond — drums and percussion
- Gene Eugene — guitars, piano, and vocals
- Mike Roe — guitars and vocals
- Terry Scott Taylor — guitars and vocals
Additional musicians
- Melissa Hasin — cello
- John McDuffie — pedal steel
Production notes
- Recorded and mixed by Gene Eugene and Lost Dogs at The Green Room, Huntington Beach, California.
gollark: There are other neat ones like the inner ear orientation sensor thing, which you could emulate with those cheap accelerometer/gyroscope modules.
gollark: I mean, they all "matter" somewhat, but I guess I would consider those among the more important ones.
gollark: You gather much data, train the neural networks on high-powered hardware, then *use* the trained one for inference on lower end stuff.
gollark: ... what?
gollark: As far as I'm aware most actually-used artificial neural network things don't do that anyway.
References
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