Amazon.com: The Marfa Tapes [Explicit] : Jack Ingram: Digital Music

Jack Ingram, Miranda Lambert & Jon Randall

The Marfa Tapes

Jack Ingram, Miranda Lambert & Jon Randall

15 SONGS • 48 MINUTES • MAY 07 2021

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
In His Arms
02:30
2
I Don't Like It
03:19
3
The Wind's Just Gonna Blow
02:33
4
Am I Right or Amarillo
03:32
5
Waxahachie
03:18
6
Homegrown Tomatoes
E
02:54
7
Breaking a Heart
02:20
8
Ghost
03:01
9
Geraldene
E
03:09
10
We'll Always Have the Blues
03:58
11
Tin Man
04:26
12
Two-Step Down to Texas
02:31
13
Anchor
03:21
14
Tequila Does
04:00
15
Amazing Grace (West Texas)
03:11
(P) 2021 Vanner Records, LLC, under exclusive license to Sony Music Entertainment. All rights reserved.

Artist bios

Jack Ingram is a Texas-born country singer whose records have earned both critical and peer adoration, and spawned massive hit singles. Emerging in the 1990s with a slew of well-received but commercially inert outings, the modern-day honky tonker didn't find major success until 2005 with the release of the single "Wherever You Are," which climbed to number one on the Billboard Country charts. "Love You," "Lips of an Angel," "Measure of a Man," and "That's a Man" kept Ingram in the Country Top 40 over the next five years, with "Barefoot and Crazy" giving him a second Country Top Ten in 2009. From that point forward, Ingram pursued an independent route, re-emerging in 2016 with Midnight Motel on Rounder Records, but a collaborative album with Miranda Lambert and Jon Randall called The Marfa Tapes brought him back to the top of the Country charts in 2021.

Ingram first carved out a niche for himself in the bars and roadhouses between Dallas and Houston. By the mid-'90s, after extensive touring with his Beat Up Ford Band, he had released two well-received independent albums and had opened for artists like Merle Haggard and Mark Chesnutt. The end of 1996 brought about a deal with Warner, which reissued his first two indie albums, and in 1997 issued his major-label debut, Livin' or Dyin'. Moving to Sony's Lucky Dog label in 1999, Ingram released his fifth roots rock album, Hey You. Three years later, he hooked up with Lee Ann Womack's producer Frank Liddell for Electric. Young Man, a compilation of recordings of many of his earliest songs, and Live at Gruene Hall: Happy Happy both arrived in 2004.

Live: Wherever You Are, a live recording featuring two studio singles, was released in 2006 and was his first for Big Machine Records, a label operated by record executive Scott Borchetta and fellow country crooner Toby Keith -- the title cut would go on to become both Ingram's and Big Machine's first number one hit. A second release from Big Machine, This Is It, followed in 2007 and included the hits "Love You" and "Lips of an Angel." Big Dreams & High Hopes, his eighth studio LP, appeared in 2009. The album produced two modest hits -- "That's a Man," which preceded the set's release, and "Barefoot and Crazy," which went to ten on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart -- but the record stalled at 21 on Billboard's Top Country Albums chart.

Ingram left Big Machine in 2011 and spent the following five years slowly working on the folk-rock material that became Midnight Motel, the album he issued on Rounder in 2016. After its August release, it debuted at 24 on Billboard's Top Country Albums chart. In 2019, he released his tenth full-length effort and second outing for Rounder, the swaggering Ridin' High...Again, which marked a return to the dusty outlaw honky tonk of his earlier works. In 2021, he teamed up with Miranda Lambert and Jon Randall for the spare, intimate The Marfa Tapes. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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The most significant country artist to emerge in the early years of the 21st century, Miranda Lambert parlayed her early success as a reality TV contestant into an unpredictable career that simultaneously defined and defied the conventions of mainstream country in the 2000s and beyond. Whether it was rabble-rousing outlaw rockers or glammy pop in the vein of Shania Twain, Lambert didn't reject Nashville traditions so much as enliven and personalize them. All of this was evident on Kerosene, the debut she released in 2005, but it was her 2007 sequel, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, and its lead single "Gunpowder & Lead" that turned her into a star. From there, the hits piled up fast and furious, as the multi-platinum albums Revolution, Four the Record, and Platinum generated such modern classics as "The House That Built Me," "Mama's Broken Heart," and "Over You." Lambert simultaneously led the trio Pistol Annies, whose 2011 debut Hell on Heels wound up pointing the way toward the rootsier, introspective music she'd cut later in the decade, including the 2016 double-LP The Weight of These Wings and The Marfa Tapes, her 2021 collaborative record with Jack Ingram and Jon Randall. She didn't abandon big, splashy mainstream country, though: her 2019 album Wildcard gave her "Bluebird," her first number one hit in eight years, and won the Best Country Album Grammy in 2021, while 2022's Palomino polished up a few tracks from The Marfa Tapes and added a B-52's cameo for good measure.

Raised by parents who were also professional partners in a private investigation agency (her father, Rick, was also a guitarist who taught his daughter how to play), Lambert began playing music early, entering talent competitions as a singer when she was 16. She performed well enough to be offered a demo recording contract in Nashville, but she bailed on the sessions, claiming the music was too pop. She headed back to Texas, where she learned to play guitar with the idea of writing her own songs. As she was woodshedding this skill, she continued to sing, fronting a variety of local bands around Longview, Texas, at ballrooms, dance halls, and restaurants.

Additionally, Lambert pursued opportunities as an actress, appearing in a Ruffles potato chip commercial and landing a small role in the 2001 comedy Slap Her She's French, but her main concentration was music, particularly the Texas Pride band she fronted. In 2001, she and her father self-financed an eponymous independent album that made local waves; "Texas Pride" and "Somebody Else" garnered enough local play that they appeared on Texas music charts. Things started to gel in 2002 when she gained the attention of music attorney Rod Phelps, who pulled enough strings in Nashville to persuade her to move back to the Music City. Once there, she auditioned for the fledgling television show Nashville Star, a singing competition launched by USA Networks in 2003 in the wake of the massive success of American Idol. Lambert made it to the finale but didn't win -- she was eclipsed by Buddy Jewell -- yet her success on the show piqued the interest of Epic Records, which signed her to a deal in September 2003 (her Epic contract would later transfer to Sony Nashville).

A single, "Me and Charlie Talking," appeared in 2004, with her full-length debut, Kerosene, released in the spring of 2005. Lambert wrote or co-wrote 11 of the 12 songs on the album, including the title track, which made it to 16 on Billboard's Country Singles chart on its way to eventual platinum certification. The album also reached platinum status, but her 2007 sophomore set Crazy Ex-Girlfriend is where Lambert demonstrated her commercial muscle. Debuting at number one on the Billboard Country chart and six on Billboard's Top 200, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend boasted two big hits in "Famous in a Small Town" and "Gunpowder & Lead," the latter reaching seven on the Country chart on its way to double-platinum certification; "More Like Her" was also a hit, making its way to 17.

Released in September 2009, third album Revolution was her blockbuster -- her biggest seller containing her biggest hit singles. "The House That Built Me" became her first number one single -- it would be certified platinum twice over, whereas its predecessor, "White Liar," went platinum and peaked at two -- and "Heart Like Mine" also reached the top; "Only Prettier" peaked at 12. Buttressed by this success, Lambert decided to venture into a side project called Pistol Annies with fellow singer/songwriters Ashley Monroe and Angaleena Presley. Their debut, Hell on Heels, appeared in August 2011 and went gold, partially on the strength of good reviews, and partially on the strength of its platinum-selling title track; the album debuted at five on Billboard's Top 200.

Arriving quickly on the heels of Hell on Heels -- less than three months later, to be precise -- came Lambert's fourth solo album, Four the Record. A hit right out of the box -- it debuted at three on the Top 200 and one on the country charts -- Four the Record contained four Top Ten country hits ("Baggage Claim," the number one "Over You," "Fastest Girl in Town," and "Mama's Broken Heart"; "All Kind of Kinds" topped out at 15) and helped cement Lambert's position as the reigning queen of country music in the 2010s. Her status was also elevated by her marriage to fellow country star Blake Shelton in 2011, the same year he landed a starring role on NBC's televised singing competition The Voice and broke into the pop mainstream via his single "Honey Bee."

Soon, Lambert and Shelton were gossip favorites, but Lambert kept working hard. She returned to acting in a guest spot on a Law & Order: Special Victims Unit episode in 2012, and Pistol Annies released a second album, Annie Up, in May 2013. The record debuted at five on the Top 200 and two on the country charts, but its single "Hush Hush" didn't crack the Top 40. In June 2014, Lambert delivered her fifth album, Platinum. Supported by the Top Ten singles "Automatic," the Carrie Underwood duet "Somethin' Bad," and "Little Red Wagon," Platinum was another big hit for Lambert. During the summer of 2015, she and Shelton announced they were divorcing, and she then entered the studio to record her sixth album. "Vice," the first single from these sessions, appeared in July 2016, peaking at number two on Billboard's country chart. It was a teaser from the moody double album The Weight of These Wings, which was released in November 2016.

Pistol Annies reunited in 2018 for Interstate Gospel, their first album in five years; the record debuted at number one on Billboard's Country Albums chart. In 2019, Lambert returned to her solo career, releasing a series of bright singles prior to the November release of Wildcard. The album debuted at four on Billboard's Top 200 and wound up winning the Grammy for Best Country Album in 2021. Later that year, Lambert released The Marfa Tapes, a spare and rustic collaborative album with fellow songwriters Jack Ingram and Jon Randall. A few of the tunes on The Marfa Tapes, including "Waxahachie" and "Geraldene," were revived for Palomino, a 2022 album Lambert cut with Randall and Luke Dick as co-producers. Preceded by the single "If I Was a Cowboy," Palomino featured the B-52's on "Music City Queen," along with a cover of Mick Jagger's "Wandering Spirit." 2023 saw Lambert team up with Leon Bridges on the soulful duet "If You Were Mine." ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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Jon Randall spent much of his career just outside of the spotlight, working as a sideman, songwriter, and producer who straddled the line between Americana and mainstream country. Randall's résumé is impressive. He first garnered attention as the guitarist in Emmylou Harris' Nash Ramblers, a position that led him to a recording contract with RCA Nashville. His 1995 debut What You Don't Know didn't catch fire, yet it showcased how he could navigate the distance separating classic and contemporary country, a skill that served him well as a hit songwriter for Brad Paisley, Dierks Bentley, and Miranda Lambert. Randall also worked as a producer for Bentley, while the association with Lambert helped coax him back to recording in 2021, when he released the collaborative album The Marfa Tapes with Lambert and Jack Ingram. It marked his first album in over a decade, following Walking Among the Living -- the 2005 LP for Epic that he released after his "Whiskey Lullaby" was turned into a smash hit by Paisley and Alison Krauss -- by 16 years.

Jon Randall was born in Dallas, Texas. He relocated to Nashville as a teenager and by the age of 20 was supporting Emmylou Harris on guitar. His work with Harris' band the Nash Ramblers on the live At the Ryman earned him a Grammy, and in 1995, RCA issued his solo debut, What You Don't Know. The album was a mild success, but his Elektra/Asylum follow-up was delayed and eventually shelved in the fallout from an internal label shakeup. Around the same time, Randall's marriage to country star Lorrie Morgan also fell apart. But Randall was undeterred. He left Asylum and re-emerged in 1999 with Willin', a rootsy, bluegrass-flavored album that followed in the footsteps of "honest" country troubadours like Steve Earle.

Randall concentrated on working as a producer and songwriter in the 2000s, scoring a big breakthrough in 2004 when Brad Paisley and Alison Krauss had a hit with "Whiskey Lullaby." In the wake of its success, he released Walking Among the Living on Epic. The next big success for Randall was his production for Dierks Bentley's 2010 bluegrass album Up on the Ridge. The pair would collaborate again on 2018's The Mountain. In between those two records, Randall co-wrote "Tin Man" with Miranda Lambert. This song led to Lambert, Randall, and Jack Ingram cutting the collaborative album The Marfa Tapes in 2021. ~ Johnny Loftus

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Language of performance
English
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