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Jewish & Yiddish Music

It Had to Happen

It Had to Happen

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Artist: James Mcmurtry
Label: Sugarhill
Category: Music

Buy New: $17.98



New (21) Used (6) from $10.00

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 51742

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.8 x 0.4

MPN: 1058
UPC: 015891105826
EAN: 0015891105826
ASIN: B000000EXT

Release Date: June 17, 1997
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Paris
  • Peter Pan
  • For All I Know
  • No More Buffalo
  • 12 O'Clock Whistle
  • Sixty Acres
  • Be With Me
  • Wild Man From Boreno
  • Stancliff's Lament
  • Jaws Of Life

Similar Items:

  • Where'd You Hide the Body
  • Too Long in the Wasteland
  • Walk Between the Raindrops
  • Saint Mary of the Woods
  • Candyland

Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Good effort   January 12, 2007
Have been a JM fan for about 3 years now,bought "live in Aught-three)first and loved it.I like this studio effort just as well, "sixty acres" is a real toe tapper. McMurty's ability to spin a tale of hardworking, rural, open space livelihoods is fantastic. I will be investigating more of his work and no doubt obtaining more.


4 out of 5 stars An Obscure Gem   December 29, 2002
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

Some years ago, I chanced to hear James McMurtry perform at a small club near where I live. He was promoting his first album which had received accolades in the alternative press, and though the crowd was very thin, he played as if he were playing for thousands.
I bought that album on cassette and still have it, but I hadn't thought much about him until recently when a friend to whom I had introduced McMurtry's music brought out a stack of his newer CDs for me to hear.
Among those was It Had To Happen. When I first put it on, I was pleased but not overwhelmed. McMurtry's unmistakeable voice and style were there to be sure, but no song initially stood out. Then, as I listened more closely, it began to grow on me.
McMurtry is nothing if not sardonic and that is a quality I admire in a songwriter. Dylan has it, Nick Cave has it, and its clear that McMurtry has it too. You gotta love story songs like 12 O'clock Whistle, the sneering Sixty Acres, and the wistful No More Buffalo. But to my ears, the best song on the album is the lyrically and musically powerful Be With Me. McMurtry's bitter, sardonic delivery is just stunning and makes it a song I could play over and over again.
There are a few weak spots that detract from a higher rating, notably the too frequent repetition of the title of the otherwise well-written Jaws of Life and the inclusion of Kinky Friedman's Wild Man From Borneo. Despite that, I highly recommend buying this obscure gem by a singer/songwriter who deserves more fame than he has.



3 out of 5 stars Almost there, but no steam.   July 4, 2002
 3 out of 7 found this review helpful

McMurtry's follow-up to the 1995 "Where'd You Hide The Body" doesn't quite live up to it's predecessor. "Paris" and "No More Buffalo" are definately standout tracks, but the rest of the album is slow moving and the songs seem to have no destination. It basically winds up being an album of songs that run too long and it lacks those characters that McMurtry is so noted for creating in his first three releases.


5 out of 5 stars Tour West Texas if Only in Your Mind   August 14, 2001
 5 out of 6 found this review helpful

The best CD I own. Great for any mood you are in ... down, alone, happy, on top of the world. If you have ever driven in West Texas, you know this CD captures the feel of the land...open, raw, western. GREAT MUSIC FOR DRIVIN' and THINKIN'.


5 out of 5 stars The best album from a great songwriter   April 22, 2000
 10 out of 10 found this review helpful

If radio had any imagination, James McMurtry would be a superstar. Folk rock simply does not get any better than this. "It had to happen," his fourth album, is also his best. Not a bad song, but the tracks that really stand out are "No More Buffalo," "Twelve O'Clock Whistle," and "Jaws of Life," which are all lengthy tributes to Americana. Also of note is the fine cover of Kinky Friedman's "Wild Man from Borneo," showing once again that James has a sense of humor. If you buy one McMurtry album, this should be the one.

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