KID ROCK - Born Free (2LP+CD)
€ 65,00
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Kid Rock – Born Free
Label:Atlantic – 1-526730
Format: 2 × Vinyl, LP, Album
+CD, Album
Country: US
Released: 14 Oct 2010
Genre: Rock
Tracklist
A1Born Free5:14
A2Slow My Roll4:19
A3Care4:12
B1Purple Sky4:06
B2When It Rains4:46
B3God Bless Saturday3:35
C1Collide4:49
C2Flyin' High4:03
C3Times Like These5:57
D1Rock On5:23
D2Rock Bottom Blues3:51
D3For The First Time (In A Long Time)5:46
CD-1Born Free
CD-2Slow My Roll
CD-3Care
CD-4Purple Sky
CD-5When It Rains
CD-6God Bless Saturday
CD-7Collide
CD-8Flyin' High
CD-9Times Like These
CD-10Rock On
CD-11Rock Bottom Blues
CD-12For The First Time (In A Long Time)
CD-13Care (Demo Version)
Kid Rock has made no secret of his desire to follow in Bob Seger’s footsteps, but it still comes as a mild shock to have Bob Ritchie deliver an album that feels like it could have slipped in unnoticed between Against the Wind and The Distance in Seger’s discography. That’s precisely what the Rick Rubin-produced Born Free is, a striking re-creation of the waning days of the Silver Bullet Band, the time when the energy started to dissipate and a fascination with country ballads seeped into the heartland rock. It’s a comfortable setting for Kid Rock, who has slowly abandoned rap for country as he crept closer to middle age, but Born Free doesn’t feel lazy: it’s tightly written and crisply articulated thanks in large part to Rubin’s recruitment of an all-star supporting band anchored by Red Hot Chili Pepper Chad Smith, Chavez vet Matt Sweeney, Los Lobos guitarist David Hidalgo, and Heartbreaker Benmont Tench. These pros give Born Free the suppleness of well-worn leather and Kid Rock rides their grooves with ease, digging into the grinding “God Bless Saturday,” laying back on “Slow My Roll,” slyly trading verses with old sparring partner Sheryl Crow on “Collide” (which also happens to feature Seger himself on piano), and shuffling along with the three-chord boogie of “Rock Bottom Blues.” Kid Rock demonstrates enough versatility to excuse “Care,” the most apathetic protest song this side of John Mayer’s “Waiting for the World to Change,” where Kid correctly deduces that the least he can do is care, but even that slight stumble works as sheer sound, drifting along upon the Midwestern rock & roll that Kid Rock has sworn to keep alive. Born Free goes a long, long way toward keeping that heartland flame burning bright: it’s familiar yet fresh, and song for song it’s the best album Kid Rock has cut since Devil Without a Cause. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine