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His mind may be fried, but Roky's vocal talents are relatively intact on this mid-1990s effort, which turns out be one of his more subdued, folkier outings. (About half of the tracks, however, are actually remixes of sessions from the mid-'80s.) Roky's most excessive traits are mostly absent; he sounds sort of like an eccentric, updated
Buddy Holly. It's the kind of roots rock that may well please the more open-minded fans of, for instance,
John Fogerty or
Van Morrison, although the compositions are more pleasant than inspired.
Charlie Sexton and
Butthole Surfer Paul Leary make low-key session appearances; Texas singer
Lou Ann Barton duets with Roky on "Starry Eyes" (reprised at the end with a version on which Roky handles all the vocals). A significant bonus, not listed on the sleeve, is "We Got Soul," the rare and fine mid-'60s single cut by Roky's first group,
the Spades, before Erickson joined
the 13th Floor Elevators.
AMG Review by Richie Unterberger
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