Such was the recipe for Night Moves’ perfectly timed comeback, an impeccable sophomore effort that ditches its juvenile reverb in favor of woozy, sunny hits.
An album filled with emotions and the hangover from the summer of the 70'. Bob Seger recorded the bulk of Night Moves before Live Bullet brought him his first genuine success, so it shouldn't come as a surprise that it's similar in spirit to the introspective Beautiful Loser, even if it rocks harder and longer.Throughout much of the album, he's coming to grips with being on the other side of 30 and still rocking. The first studio LP of Bob Seger with the Silver Bullet Band, Night Moves released on Oct. 22, 1976. Seger knew what would hap This album, Night Moves, contains many of these types of songs. Talk about a song written about past feelings, it just wasn't his song and his feelings, but so many of us guys can recall the same dealings going on in our early years with the same kind of girl.
These aren’t the broody, mushroom-tripped guys. Night Moves exude an easy charisma on Can You Really Find Me. They've since signed with Domino and have given the record a facelift with the help of producer Thom Monahan (Vetiver, Beachwood Sparks).Drawn in equal measures from Gram Parsons and Bob Seger's heartland soul, the ingredients are all still there: the guitars rollicking through "Family Tongues", the hazy AM murk over the closing title track, and the short yet cinematic opus "Put Out Your Shoulder".
They've since signed with Domino and have given the record a … Jesse Eisenberg and Dakota Fanning star as … Since this is Night Moves' debut, it remains to be seen if there really are only so many permutations of electro-psych-country or if they're just a young band with plenty of time for experimentation. Back in 2012, Night Moves emerged from the shimmering, quickly widening pool of acoustic-psych rock with Colored Emotion, a patchwork breakout that squeezed serious indie-God potential into fuzzy threads of reverb.Night Moves then dipped right back into the ether to work on more music, or maybe not, and most people haven’t bat eyelash at the mention of the Twin Cities trio since. No question, its title cut, "Night Moves", is not only the best song on the LP, but perhaps his best ever. This debut full-length from Minneapolis rock dreamers Night Moves was in many ways the end goal of the first few years of their existence. Rather than hone their songs by playing live or building a local buzz, Night Moves focused on recording a meticulously pieced-together early version of Colored Emotions, using the studio as a filter for their starry-skied '70s-leaning indie rock.
Night Moves is the ninth studio album by American rock singer-songwriter Bob Seger, and his first studio album to credit the Silver Bullet Band.The album was released on October 22, 1976 by Capitol Records.Although the front cover only credits backing by the Silver Bullet Band, four of the nine songs on the album feature backing by the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. They’re the velvet prom night guys, the band scratching through the diner speaker, and they work it to artistic ecstasy.A lot happened while they were gone. Night Moves is the ninth studio album by American rock singer-songwriter Bob Seger, and his first studio album to credit the Silver Bullet Band.The album was released on October 22, 1976 by Capitol Records.Although the front cover only credits backing by the Silver Bullet Band, four of the nine songs on the album feature backing by the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Like many new groups forced to do their thing in front of a wider, more skeptical, and this time paying audience, Night Moves rely on the sound that got them signed rather than pushing themselves in a new direction, and the results are not as exciting as they could've been. Even when that's not the case, when the original threads are repeated together over the course of the album, each element's ingenuity still becomes part of the thematic background noise. Without standouts "Headlights", "Country Queen", and "Horses", these other tracks would blend together. Night Moves’ success in warming up and cracking open emotionally shows a new embrace of major chord classics. “Hiding In The Melody” and “Leave Your Light On” call upon dad-radio crooners like Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young and Bob Seger; the latter’s “Night Moves” just so happens to be the band’s namesake. Can You Really Find Me; Night Moves 8; ... this follow-up to second album Pennied Days sees the additional production talent of Spoon’s Jim Eno enlisted, lending a … The electrified Minneapolis psych-country trio Night Moves originally posted their debut album for free on Bandcamp.