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| McMurtry Is Nominated In 2008 Americana Music Honors & Awards In tonight's announcement of nominees for the 2008 Americana Honors & Awards, James McMurtry was nominated in three categories: "Best Artist, " "Best Album" and "Best Song." The album is his current CD, Just Us Kids on Lightning Rod Records, and the song is the controversial "Cheney's Toy." McMurtry was tied for most nominations. Since the April 15 release of Just Us Kids, great things have happened for McMurtry, making this his breakthrough recording in many ways. The album spent six straight weeks at #1 on Radio & Records' Americana Airplay chart, and has held steady at #2 for several weeks since then. In its first week, the album debuted on no fewer than four Billboard sales charts (Hot 200 albums, Heatseekers, New Artist and Indie), outpacing his last release, Childish Things, in sales. The nominations, announced today by the Americana Music Association are not a first for McMurtry, who in 2006 was nominated and won awards for both "Best Album" and "Best Song." McMurtry has received the highest press accolades for Just Us Kids, applauding his bravery for speaking about the problems facing America, and even calling the enemy by name. "You'd be hard-pressed to find a more hard-boiled depiction of hardscrabble '00s life on the edge of recession, " wrote Blender in its four-star review. Entertainment Weekly deemed it an "EW pick, " citing "brilliant character sketches and a steamy Texas roadhouse rumble." And Rolling Stone minced no words: "The veteran Texas songwriter's new album, Just Us Kids, features the slow burner 'Cheney's Toy, ' one of the sharpest musical indictments yet of George Bush." The Washington Post took it even further: "There's a good chance that McMurtry's Just Us Kids will be the best album of 2008. Angry and scathing in this year of war, recession and presidential campaigns, the disc transcends mere sloganeering by offering the kind of complicated characters and visual description you might expect from the son of novelist Larry McMurtry. But this is much more than literature set to folkie guitar; these tangled tales of dead-end teenagers, burned-out boomers, cynical politicians, divorced loners, drunken roadies and homeless survivors are pushed along by a twitchy John Lee Hooker-like boogie that keeps you hungry for the next line." write your comments about the article :: © 2008 Jazz News :: home page |