ALEJANDRO ESCOVEDO - The Crossing 
       [Deluxe Edition Digipak] 
(CD 2018, NEW,  Yep Roc) Factory Sealed
Type: Album
Format: CD
Features: Digipak
Genre: Rock
Edition: Deluxe Edition
CD Details
  • Released: September 14, 2018
  • Originally Released: 2018
  • Label: Yep Roc Records

Entertainment Reviews:

Paste (magazine) - "A concept piece about two young Mexicans attempting to deal with the stark realities of a new life in a small Texas town, it demonstrates how politics and polemics often yield harsh results."
Paste (magazine) - "[With] both slam-bang fast songs and achingly slow songs that capture both the parallel arrivals of foreigners into America and of teenagers into adulthood."

Tracks:

  • 1.Andare
  • 2.Footsteps in the Shadows
  • 3.Texas Is My Mother
  • 4.Teenage Luggage
  • 5.Something Blue
  • 6.Outlaw for You
  • 7.Amor Puro
  • 8.Waiting for Me
  • 9.How Many Times
  • 10.Cherry Blossom Rain
  • 11.Sonica USA
  • 12.Rio Navidad
  • 13.Silver City
  • 14.Fury and Fire
  • 15.Flying
  • 16.MC Overload
  • 17.The Crossing

Product Description:

Personnel: Alejandro Escovedo (vocals, guitar, percussion); Don Antonio (vocals, guitar, lap steel guitar, keyboards); Radek Krizanovsky, Marie M.Tlov, Agnieszka Sciazko, Helena Jir Kovsk, Milena Kol.Rov (violin); Pavel Ciprys (viola); Adriana Vor.Ckov (cello); Francesco Valtieri (saxophone); Nicola Peruch (piano, electric piano, organ, synthesizer); Matteo Monti (drums, percussion); Denis Valentini (percussion, background vocals).
Audio Mixer: Brian Deck.
Liner Note Author: Alejandro Escovedo.
Recording information: Cosabeat Studio, Villafranca, Italy (04/2018); Industrial Amusement, Los Angeles (04/2018); London (04/2018); Portland, OR (04/2018); Shabby Road Studios, Berkeley, CA (04/2018); Sonic Studios, Dublin (04/2018); SONO Studio, Prague, Czech Republic (04/2018); The Zone, Dripping Springs, TX (04/2018).
Photographer: Nancy Rankin Escovedo.
In 2000, Alejandro Escovedo wrote a play with music titled By the Hand of the Father, a moving song cycle that dealt with the Mexican-American experience as families left one home behind in hopes of finding another on the other side of the border. Escovedo is the son of one such man, and By the Hand of the Father was informed by the lives of his own family members. In 2018, Escovedo explores not dissimilar themes on his concept album The Crossing, but instead of telling the story of his father and those like him, here he imagines a story of two expatriates not unlike himself, and what their lives might be like if they made their way to America in these times. In 17 songs, The Crossing follows the journeys of two young men who came to America -- Diego from Mexico, Salvo from Italy -- chasing a dream of the nation they came to love from vintage punk rock, film noir, and beat-era literature. In their minds, America is not only a place of freedom and opportunity, but of ineffable cool, and if the art lives up to their expectations, the reality of daily life outside the American mainstream is another matter. These songs run the emotional gamut from the furious celebration of "Sonica USA" ("I saw the Zeros and they looked like me/This is the America that I want to be") to the bitter rant of "Teenage Luggage" ("America is beautiful, America is ill/America is a bloodstain in a honky tonk kill") to the rueful wisdom of the title cut ("Thoughts and prayers they never last/Don't waste them on the past/We all become history when we make the crossing"). Escovedo wrote these songs in collaboration with Italian rock musician Antonio Gramentiere, with Gramentiere and his band Don Antonio providing the backing, and the partnership proves to be inspired, with the musicians tackling the multiple influences and shifting moods of this music with passion and aplomb. And Escovedo has brought in some impressive guests for these sessions, including Wayne Kramer of the MC5, James Williamson of Iggy & the Stooges, Peter Perrett and John Perry of the Only Ones, and Joe Ely (who lends harmonies to a beautiful cover of his song "Silver City"). With The Crossing, Escovedo puts a new and compelling spin on the oft-told tale of the American dream as seen both from a distance and up close. In his hands, this story is both timeless and as up to date as the latest news bulletin, and it connects as great music and outstanding storytelling delivered by an artist who has a unique talent for both.