The Organic Farmers Season : Unplugged Live The Inspector Cluzo

Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
16.10.2020

Album including Album cover

I`m sorry!

Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,

due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.

We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO

  • 1 A Man Outstanding in his Field 07:39
  • 2 The Sand Preacher 03:19
  • 3 Cutlural Misunderstanding 03:55
  • 4 Ideologies 06:15
  • 5 The Run 06:14
  • 6 Lost in Traditions 03:34
  • 7 Lou Casse Theme 03:11
  • 8 Fishermen 05:22
  • 9 The Globalisation Blues 06:03
  • 10 The Best 05:19
  • 11 We the People of the Soil 03:27
  • 12 Hey Hey My My 03:32
  • 13 Brothers in Ideals 03:59
  • 14 No Deal at the Crossroads 03:26
  • 15 Little Girl & The Whistlin Train 11:50
  • Total Runtime 01:17:05

Info for The Organic Farmers Season : Unplugged Live



On the 22nd June 1979, opening the album Rust Never Sleeps, a song was released by Neil Young and his Crazy Horse that history would turn into an anthem. My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue) contains all the urgency of punk, shaking the establishment at the time, but done in acoustic peacefulness. The album finishes, with the same song, which in the meantime becomes electrified, even electrocuted as Hey Hey, My My(Into the Black).The storm is impressive: grunge, ten years later will still bear the burn marks of this arson and wild dissonance.

Between acoustic and electric, Neil Young’s album was mostly written on the road, the two versions of Hey Hey My My tested against two different backdrops: the campfire and the raging inferno. Neil Young and his horsemen of the apocalypse had the genius to not choose between the two. The tour, therefore, logically, started with Los Angeles and San Francisco, in fertile South-West America.

Over forty years later, in another South West, the song is played again, increasingly battered and worn over time by the love of many, this song which will never die. This South West, whose GASCONY corner is sometimes known as The Little California, is bordered by Bordeaux (Krakatoa), Biarritz (Theatre du Casino) and Mont-de-Marsan (Theatre de Gascogne). These venues hosted in early 2020, a passionate public, acoustic instruments, good vibrations and a mobile recording studio, all of which were necessary to make the live record, which you hold in your hands today, alive and kicking.

An unplugged album by a group known for having their fingers in the electric socket. The album features the Neil Young cover alongside a host of The Inspector Cluzo classics. The album was produced by engineer/mixer/producer Vance Powell (Jack White, Seasick Steve, Raconteurs, Stapleton, Clutch) & the mastering engineer Pete Lyman (Chris Stapleton, Tom Waits…..) , two royalties in the world of warm and woody analogic, gave the best of themselves to the two Gascons. Motivated not by ambition, not by compassion: simply because these songs deserved this kind of unruly respect, this messed up elegance, this American instinct. For these acoustic songs to make so much noise, their discreet science of sound was critical. It allowed two Gascon boys to highjack the spirit of unplugged recordings and turn it into filtered mayhem, tamed but not domesticated.

There is plenty to hear, within the gaps, in these versions. On Hey Hey My My, The Inspector Cluzo’s version of which has been validated by the Broken Arrow ranch, Neil Young sings: “There’s more to the picture than meets the eye”.In this album, there’s also more than meets the ear.

The Inspector Cluzo



The Inspector Cluzo
A decade after their debut, “Rockfarmers” The Inspector Cluzo are celebrating their 10th anniversary, starting with the sixth studio album “We the People of the Soil” and a performance at Lollapallooza in Paris. Recorded in Nashville by Grammy-winning producer Vance Powell (Jack White, White Stripes, Seasick Steve, Stapleton), the new album was recorded in just four days on analog equipment, much in the spirit of “rockfarming.” Formed by two former Wolfunkind members, guitarist Malcolm (Laurent Lacrout) and drummer Phil (Mathieu Jourdan) -- a nod to AC/DC -- The Inspector Cluzo hails from Mont-de-Morsan in France and is perhaps one of the only bands that relies entirely on DIY, from managing, booking to recording and publishing, and does not have a bass player -- hence the name of their label, Fuckthebassplayer. Their fusion of funk rock, groove and metal has earned them international recognition. The eponymous single from the 2010 album “The French Bastards” even beat Lady Gaga on the Japanese charts. Relentless, the duo has played all of the major festivals all over the globe and is notorious for its energetic, raw performances.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO