Directed by James Gist and Eloyce Gist • 1930 • United States HELL-BOUND TRAIN is arguably the most significant rediscovery in Pioneers of
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Directed by James Gist and Eloyce Gist • 1930 • United States HELL-BOUND TRAIN is arguably the most significant rediscovery in Pioneers of
Currently watching.

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"Hell Bound Train" Danwood Run
Lone Star 89/gamble
Lone Star 89/gamble Hell-Bound Train.How in tarnation could an entire train disappear into thin Nebraska air-along with the army payroll it was carrying? That's what Colonel Marshal Harrison wants to know.and he's asked the Lone Star duo to find out. Take Action! Get it immediately!!
Savoy Brown Street Corner Talking - from CD Hellbound Train at Secret Records Limited
Ain't No Need To Worry - Savoy Brown Hellbound Train CD out at Secret Records Limited

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Hellbound Train - Savoy Brown Hellbound Train CD out at Secret Records Limited
Street Corner Talking - Savoy Brown Hellbound Train CD out at Secret Records Limited
Review: Savoy Brown
Savoy Brown - Hellbound Train
CD - Secret Records Limited
Comprising the same lineup as Street Corner Talking, Savoy Brown released Hellbound Train a year later. For this effort, Kim Simmonds' guitar theatrics are toned down a bit and the rest of the band seems to be a little less vivid and passionate with their music. The songs are still draped with Savoy Brown's sleek, bluesy feel, but the deep-rooted blues essence that so easily emerged from their last album doesn't rise as high throughout Hellbound Train's tracks.
The title cut is most definitely the strongest, with Dave Walker, Simmonds, and Paul Raymond sounding tighter than on any other song, and from a wider perspective, Andy Silvester's bass playing is easily Hellbound's most complimenting asset. On tracks like "Lost and Lonely Child," "Doin' Fine," and "If I Could See an End," the lifeblood of the band doesn't quite surge into the music as it did before, and the tracks become only average-sounding blues efforts.
Because of Savoy Brown's depth of talent, this rather nonchalant approach doesn't make Hellbound Train a "bad" album by any means - it just fails to equal the potency of its predecessor. But there is a noticeable difference in the albums that followed this one, as the band and especially Simmonds himself was beginning to show signs of fatigue, and a significant decline in the group's overall sound was rapidly becoming apparent.
Review by Mike DeGagne
Source: http://www.allmusic.com/album/hellbound-train-r17428/review