AVAILABLE NOW: Lost Dogs – Gift Horse – CD
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Track listing
1. "Ghost Train (To Nowhere)" (Taylor)
2. "Free Drinks and a Dream (A Vegas Story)" (Taylor)
3. "If You Love Here (You'd Be Home By Now)" (Taylor)
4. "Diamonds to Coal" (Taylor)
5. "Blessing In Disguise" (Taylor)
6. "Loved and Forgiven" (Taylor)
7. "Rebecca Go Home" (Taylor)
8. "Honeysuckle Breeze" (Taylor)
9. "Ditto" (Taylor)
10. "The Wall of Heaven" (Taylor)
11. "Father Along" (Traditional, Arranged by The Lost Dogs)
Lost Dogs: Terry Taylor, Gene Eugene, Derri Daugherty, Mike Roe.
Gift Horse is an album by Roots music band Lost Dogs, released on BEC Records in 1999.
This turned out to be Gene Eugene's last album with the band when 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 introductions and on later live albums and videos.
This is the most consistent of the Lost Dogs albums. Understandably so, as Terry Taylor wrote ten of the 11 tracks. While previous Lost Dogs albums dabbled with blues, country, folk, gospel, and modern rock with varying degrees of continuity, Gift Horse has implemented those ingredients almost exclusively in a jangly, country-rock vein. This is Taylor's finest songwriting to date, at least from a melody standpoint. Lyrically, his themes have always centered around tongue-in-cheek queries into the challenges of righteous living and the foibles of human nature. In the '70s his band Daniel Amos released two dreadful albums with which they tried, in vain, to mimic the popular soft country-rock craze of that era. His work with the Lost Dogs is a true testament to his growth as a songwriter; 20 years later Taylor's country-tinged songwriting is nothing less than superb. He is joined again by singers and guitarists by trade Mike Roe, Derri Daugherty, and Gene Eugene, whose respective home-bands, the 77's, the Choir, and Adam Again are becoming more irrelevant with each passing year. ~ Dave Sleger