Neighborhood Is Changing

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Tom House fits into his native Nashville like corn whiskey at a martini power lunch. Wild and raw as the country rock of Dylan and the Band, his debut has The Basement Tapes spontaneity and, most remarkably, a good portion of its lyrical mystery: "Oh words they tell it all so well/they ring as clear as a crystal bell/but what they portend/we pretend to tell/is nothing, nothing at all." With a twangy jug-band sound of horns, organ, jew's-harp, and fiddle, House's mystical, left-of-left-of-center, working-class images feel credible, stripped of pretention. His squirrely delivery (part Vic Chesnutt, part early bootlegged Dylan) isn't easy on the ears, but The Neighborhood Is Changing is still a weirdly fetching record. --Roy Francis Kasten

Neighborhood Is Changing,Tom House,Checkered Past,Americana,Country,Pop,Singer/Songwriter
Neighborhood Is Changing
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • The world needs more Tom House
  • unexpected brilliance
  • Diamond In The Rough
Neighborhood Is Changing
Tom House
Manufacturer: Checkered Past
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

Alt-Country & AmericanaAlt-Country & Americana | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Folk | Styles | Music
Singer-SongwritersSinger-Songwriters | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Country | Indie Music | Stores | Music
GeneralGeneral | Folk | Indie Music | Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. This White Man's Burden
  2. Jesus Doesn't Live Here Anymore

ASIN: B000005CGU
Release Date: 1998-07-07

Tracks:

  1. C'mon Through Carolina
  2. I Got Neighbors
  3. Nuclear Winter
  4. I'm In Love With Susan Smith
  5. Kind Lady
  6. Baby I Can't Always Do Right
  7. A Woman And A Man
  8. Mockingbird
  9. I Had A Place
  10. Something In The Wind Tonight
  11. The Deepest Part The Deepest End
  12. Soil Of The Earth
  13. Corinne

Amazon.com

Tom House fits into his native Nashville like corn whiskey at a martini power lunch. Wild and raw as the country rock of Dylan and the Band, his debut has The Basement Tapes spontaneity and, most remarkably, a good portion of its lyrical mystery: "Oh words they tell it all so well/they ring as clear as a crystal bell/but what they portend/we pretend to tell/is nothing, nothing at all." With a twangy jug-band sound of horns, organ, jew's-harp, and fiddle, House's mystical, left-of-left-of-center, working-class images feel credible, stripped of pretention. His squirrely delivery (part Vic Chesnutt, part early bootlegged Dylan) isn't easy on the ears, but The Neighborhood Is Changing is still a weirdly fetching record. --Roy Francis Kasten

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The world needs more Tom House.......2002-09-26

...or at least I do.
This is amazing stuff. Roots/folk vocals and Leonard Cohen quality lyrics. Darkness and light rolled into one. Ya gotta try it. Really.

5 out of 5 stars unexpected brilliance.......2001-03-15

This album is excellent. I bought this CD back in 1999 and it's been travelling with me ever since. House's eerily twangy vocal, sharp and poignant lyrics, and dirty-sounding string instrumentations takes Americana to a new level. House's songs remind me certain scenes from the recent Coen brother comedy "O Brother Where Art Thou". House's songs, however, are anything but comical. They are often dark and groom against a "rural noir" background. The songs in this CD are "roots" recording in its literal sense: roots of human emotions. One thing I look for in music is that raw and unpolished sonic energy. I don't really care about form. To me, there's a commonality linking all my favorite artists like Tom Waits, John Cage, Sonic Youth, Billie Holiday, Brian Eno, Nine Inch Nails, Nick Cave, Yo La Tengo et cetra. When I first listened to Tom House's Neighborhood Is Changing, I found the same underlying quintessence. Highly recommended! I also own the other two House recordings, This White Man's Burden, Til You've Seen Mine. I suggest you start with Neighborhood is changing, his personal best in my opinion.

5 out of 5 stars Diamond In The Rough.......1999-05-29

I got this cd on recomendation from Amazon.com. They said most fans of Chuck E. Weiss bought music by Tom House...it took a little getting used to...but now I can't stop listening...I don't know much about bluegrass, but I am sure a fan of the genre will find many influences in Tom's music...I am drawn to the lyrics and his sense of story...he puts me right in modern day hill country...I would recommend this album over White Man's Burden...In White Man's Burden he does a little self righteous preaching....IE "White Man"...But, on balance they are both good...however you will not regret getting this album...it gets better everytime I listen to it...
Neighborhood Is Changing
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • The world needs more Tom House
  • unexpected brilliance
  • Diamond In The Rough
Neighborhood Is Changing
Tom House
Manufacturer: Checkered Past
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

Alt-Country & AmericanaAlt-Country & Americana | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
Singer-SongwritersSinger-Songwriters | Pop | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. This White Man's Burden
  2. Jesus Doesn't Live Here Anymore

ASIN: B00003TFQQ
Release Date: 1999-12-07

Tracks:

  1. C'mon Through Carolina
  2. I Got Neighbors
  3. Nuclear Winter
  4. I'm in Love with Susan Smith
  5. Kind Lady
  6. Baby I Can't Always Do Right
  7. A Woman and A Man
  8. Mockingbird
  9. Something in the Wind Tonight
  10. The Deepest Part, The Deepest End
  11. Soil in the Earth
  12. Corinne
  13. Corrine

Amazon.com

Tom House fits into his native Nashville like corn whiskey at a martini power lunch. Wild and raw as the country rock of Dylan and the Band, his debut has The Basement Tapes spontaneity and, most remarkably, a good portion of its lyrical mystery: "Oh words they tell it all so well/they ring as clear as a crystal bell/but what they portend/we pretend to tell/is nothing, nothing at all." With a twangy jug-band sound of horns, organ, jew's-harp, and fiddle, House's mystical, left-of-left-of-center, working-class images feel credible, stripped of pretention. His squirrely delivery (part Vic Chesnutt, part early bootlegged Dylan) isn't easy on the ears, but The Neighborhood Is Changing is still a weirdly fetching record. --Roy Francis Kasten

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The world needs more Tom House.......2002-09-26

...or at least I do.
This is amazing stuff. Roots/folk vocals and Leonard Cohen quality lyrics. Darkness and light rolled into one. Ya gotta try it. Really.

5 out of 5 stars unexpected brilliance.......2001-03-15

This album is excellent. I bought this CD back in 1999 and it's been travelling with me ever since. House's eerily twangy vocal, sharp and poignant lyrics, and dirty-sounding string instrumentations takes Americana to a new level. House's songs remind me certain scenes from the recent Coen brother comedy "O Brother Where Art Thou". House's songs, however, are anything but comical. They are often dark and groom against a "rural noir" background. The songs in this CD are "roots" recording in its literal sense: roots of human emotions. One thing I look for in music is that raw and unpolished sonic energy. I don't really care about form. To me, there's a commonality linking all my favorite artists like Tom Waits, John Cage, Sonic Youth, Billie Holiday, Brian Eno, Nine Inch Nails, Nick Cave, Yo La Tengo et cetra. When I first listened to Tom House's Neighborhood Is Changing, I found the same underlying quintessence. Highly recommended! I also own the other two House recordings, This White Man's Burden, Til You've Seen Mine. I suggest you start with Neighborhood is changing, his personal best in my opinion.

5 out of 5 stars Diamond In The Rough.......1999-05-29

I got this cd on recomendation from Amazon.com. They said most fans of Chuck E. Weiss bought music by Tom House...it took a little getting used to...but now I can't stop listening...I don't know much about bluegrass, but I am sure a fan of the genre will find many influences in Tom's music...I am drawn to the lyrics and his sense of story...he puts me right in modern day hill country...I would recommend this album over White Man's Burden...In White Man's Burden he does a little self righteous preaching....IE "White Man"...But, on balance they are both good...however you will not regret getting this album...it gets better everytime I listen to it...

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