|

SALT SEX SLAVES
“England wove great storytelling into an "Exile on
Main Street" inspired gumbo that was poignant and
rocked at the same time." - FLIPSIDE,
2007 RELEASE OF THE YEAR
(See Critics Pick)
“After 'Greetings From Cairo' another fascinating
piece of unsurpassed songwriting. Four
Stars.” - KEYS AND CHORDS
(Read Full Review)
“A hugely entertaining and dark tale of slaves
and salt in Illinois, over a wash of Stones riffage.
Eight out of Ten rating.” - AMERICANA
UK
“None of this story would matter here if the music
and lyrics on Salt Sex Slaves weren’t worthwhile,
intelligent and, to use a hackneyed word, deep. Even
setting aside the documentary nature of England’s
record, fans of alt.country, Americana, folk and
plain old rock & roll will enjoy this CD.
Five out of Five rating.” - NEWS
4 U
“The music recalls the Stones in their best years
but is slightly more Americana in style. At first
listen the CD is remarkable as a whole but then it
even grows further on you. Stace England has already
been embraced by a small circle but with Salt Sex
Slaves he's ready for a much bigger audience.” - VELVET
MUSIC
(Read Full Review)
“The alt.country / Americana scene has been
full of expectation about what this CD would bring. And it's
a lot, because ever since the first listen, we are
again deeply impressed.” - ROOTSTIME,
BELGUIM
(Read Full Review)
“Salt Sex Slaves, is a disc not to be missed,
especially because of the excellent talents of these
intellectuals, something very rare these days.” -
IL POPOLO DEL BLUES, ITALY
“On his newest, the terrific 'Salt
Sex Slaves', England tackles another bit of American
history. The songs revolve around topics like the
production of salt, kidnapping, slavery and
assassination in free country. And all of it happens
in a musical context which reverts unabashedly to the Stones at the time
of their classic 'Exile On Main Street'.”
- CONTROL
ALT COUNTRY
(Read Full Review)
“The band's engaging music includes energetic
country rock songs like "Kidnapping Venus" as well
as homespun ballads like the heartbreaking 'Shawne-etown.'” - ILLINOIS
ENTERTAINER
“Anyone who thinks they know what
England is going to do next is a fool or a
lunatic. The rest of us know that the best thing
to do is sit back and wait for what comes, let
England work on his own time, and bask in the
joyful result.”
- AMAZON.COM REVIEWER
(Read Full Review)
“Salt Sex Slaves borrows
from the same insights (as Greetings From Cairo,
Illinois), making it once again the path for the
laudable England, almost a documentary filmmaker
who chooses his targets for telling stories with
a universal value.”
- ROOTS HIGHWAY, ITALY
“The subjects are not always happy
ones but the music is in the fine tradition of The
Black Crowes, and peers like Steve Wynn and Dan
Stuart.” - RADIO ONE, BELGUIM
(Read Full Review)
“You almost miss the message of this
CD because of the old-fashioned rocking nature of
Salt Sex Slaves (Rankoutsider / Sonic Rendezvous) by
Stace England & The Salt Kings. The title track,
also the first song on the CD, is rock in the style
of The Black Crowes and especially The Rolling
Stones at the time of Exile On Main Street.”
- ALT COUNTRY.NL
“Salt Sex Slaves" is a CD that revives the spirits
forgotten by history such as local legends like the
ghosts who still inhabit the Old Slave House.” - MESCALINA,
ITALY
“In Salt Sex Slaves Stace England has created
another excellent song cycle about the history of
his home state of Illinois, proving again that he
has an excellent ear for both music and story
telling.” - BLOGCRITICS.ORG
(Read Full Review)
“The resulting album, "Salt Sex Slaves" is
another slice of bizarre U.S. history, weaving
together the stories and mythology of brutal
salt production, slave breeding and racism in
what was supposed to be a free state in
pre-Civil War times." - FLIPSIDE
(Read Full Interview)
“When England was on the grounds of the house he
became overwhelmed. 'This place about knocks you
over,' recalled England. 'It's almost like a
breathing organism'." - NIGHTLIFE
(Read Full Interview)
“He let the legends of the house sink into him
and though he does not believe in ghosts in the
supernatural sense, he said the ghosts of Uncle
Bob and whippings and chains live in the third
floor as real as the beams of wood, themselves."
- HARRISBURG REGISTER
GREETINGS FROM CAIRO, ILLINOIS
“Top Ten Albums of 2005.”
- GREIL
MARCUS (THE VILLAGE VOICE CRITICS POLL)
“Every now and then a CD will find its way onto your stereo and proceed to stomp both your ass and
ears into the ground. Stace England's Greetings From Cairo, Illinois is one of those discs, an ambitious work of
staggering brilliance and stunning confidence.”
- ALT.CULTURE.GUIDE
(Read Full Review)
“Singer/songwriter Stace England has made a captivating concept CD about the history of Cairo, Illinois.”
- VPRO DUTCH NATIONAL BROADCASTING
(Hear Radio Documentary)
“The closing track, a battered-but-hopeful
"Can't We All Get Along," offers some hope for
the city's future, with England singing, 'We've
been fighting for so long/ It's killing this
town'.”
- CHICAGO TRIBUNE
(Read Full Article)
“Cairo Illinois may have been bypassed by the sands
of time, but Stace England has created an album that
will ensure it's not forgotten any time soon.”
- BLOGCRITICS.ORG
(PICKS FOR THE BEST ALBUMS OF 2005)
“Singer-songwriter Stace England's mesmerizing
song cycle about political tensions Downstate
ranks right up there with Sufjan Stevens' cult
hit disc "Illinois."
- CHICAGO SUN TIMES
“Stace
England's Greetings from Cairo, Illinois
was a gigantic accomplishment. England managed a
rare feat-- he crafted a concept album that
actually holds together, with individual parts
that nearly all stand on their own.”
- NIGHTLIFE
(Read Full Review)
“All in all, think
Johnny Horton's 1959 classic Johnny Horton Makes
History, gussied up for postmodern times, and
retooled for the 21st century.” - POP CULTURE PRESS
“These eleven audio
post cards tell of the rise and fall of one town
doomed by floods and prejudice, and proceed to
rock us right into the present.” - NO
DEPRESSION
"Operating on a
smaller scale, recording artist Stace England
focused on just one Illinois town: Cairo (pronounced
kay-row) to create an album that's more accessible
and just as satisfying as his indie rock counterpart
(Sufjan Stevens)." - CHICAGOIST
(Read Full Review)
“Greetings From Cairo Illinois tells a very interesting story, Stace England has made
a fascinating record, an admirable achievement.” - AMERICANA UK
"Greetings from Cairo, Illinois" is a remarkable disc that grows in splendor with every listen, at a rate
that has yet to slow down. Enormously recommended and without question one of the best CDs in this genre this year.” -
ROOTSTIME, BELGIUM
"A disc magisterial in its conception and its execution alike, Stace England’s Greetings From Cairo,
Illinois may at a glance appear to be a jape, a goof, instead of an extraordinary meld of music and history.” - PLAYBACK:stl
(Read Full Review)
"But
England wasn't just some fly by night troubadour
trying to profit from Cairo's woes. With the help of
50 other local musicians and singers, England had
employed an impressive musical range to try and
explain the puzzle that is Cairo." - NATIONAL
PUBLIC RADIO
"He doesn't detail much vice, which was once the town's bread and butter, but there's lots of race—1909
lynch mob, segregated bus crosses big river, 1967 vigilantes, young Jesse Jackson stops by." - ROBERT CHRISTGAU,
THE VILLAGE
VOICE
"It's (Equal Opportunity Lynch Mob) an irony worthy of Randy Newman. England's assuming the mob's
perspective is a brave move that few could match."
- LUNA KAFÉ, NORWAY
(Read Full Review)
" . . . Greetings exposes the
gritty reality of a city the liner notes describe as
"the most fascinating town in America," starting
with the a cappella nineteenth-century folk chestnut
"Goin' Down to Cairo" and the 1920s-era
finger-picked "Cairo Blues. "
- RIVERFRONT TIMES
”Where Mississippi and Ohio Rivers merge into one powerful river lies Cairo. Its days as an important
traffic junction have been eroded by time; now it is a dusty borough where racism still slumbers. CD Rating 8 out of 10." -
DE VOLKSKRANT (Dutch National Newspaper)
"For Stace England, the journey on 'Greetings from Cairo' begins and ends in the southern Illinois region
from which he hails. If (Sufjan) Stevens is a wanderer, then England is a settler.
- ST. LOUIS POST DISPATCH
"Along the way we meet General U.S. Grant, an “equal opportunity lynch mob” and the Committee
of Ten Million, a racist organization called “White Hats” thanks to the pale hard hats they wore.
Fascinating."
- HARP
"Stace England's Greetings From Cairo, Illinois not only provides a portrait of the city in question,
it succeeds in being a fine album musically . . . Who knows, maybe this long moribund city will finally live up to its potential
because of one person's affection and compassion."
“Stace England has made a strong work here. It is pleasing to the ear, creative in its variety and
also offers some history, as well as food for thought. One is inclined to believe the songwriter when he says: ‘Cairo,
Illinois is the most fascinating town in America’.”
- DAS ROCKMAGAZIN, GERMANY
"An ambitious, very interesting work entirely dedicated to his city."
- ROOTS HIGHWAY, ITALY
"This is an entertaining record, as much for its History Channel vibe as the music itself."
- HIGH BIAS
"Greetings From Cairo, Illinois from Stace England is an enriching musical trip through the entire
history of that city."
- CONTROL.ALT.COUNTRY, BELGIUM
"A concept record that proves history does not need to be boring."
- ALT COUNTRY.NL, THE NETHERLANDS
"Greetings from Cairo, Illinois proves that America is still full of interesting stories, old and
new, for the curious to discover and preserve, like old postcards."
- MESCALINA, ITALY
"A both shocking and entertaining document that you will want to use on your next trip through America to
visit this city at the merging of the Mississippi and the Ohio."
- PLATOMANIA, THE NETHERLANDS
"The disk is an ambitious concept-album dedicated entirely to the story of the tormented town of Cairo,
Illinois and the reasons, while having potential, it did not succeed and develop to compete with other cities."
- IL POPOLO DEL BLUES, ITALY
"If you accidentally happen to end up this side of Cairo, Illinois this CD is definitely no dull history
lesson, and is also a fine travel guide."
- KINDAMUZIK, THE NETHERLANDS
"Greetings from Cairo, Illinois is not so much an album as an auditory history of the city that
haunts singer/songwriter Stace England. One listen to the CD and the audience will be haunted as well. . . Cairo is
the cultural metropolis that should have been, and England's seminal work lyricises the political corruption, incompetence
and racism begetting the once-great river city's downfall."
- FLIPSIDE
"The atmosphere of modern-day Commercial Avenue in Cairo is surreal. The wide street was designed
to carry large volumes of people and goods through the city's bustling commercial center on the riverfront. Any more, Commercial
Avenue is deserted like an Old West ghost town or Hollywood sound stage."
- SOUTHEAST MISSOURIAN
"Stace England's latest album
Greetings from Cairo is an elegant and uncompromising look at that
sad, storied town, from its roots as a major Midwestern hub during the days of Mark Twain to the ascent (and perhaps simultaneous
descent) into a vice economy before exploding with racial tension and subsequently rotting away into a red-state ghetto."
- NIGHTLIFE
"Cairo (pronounced 'KAY-ro,' like the syrup, not the ancient city in which Westerners risk life and limb
nowadays just for buying Big Macs), Illinois is a (sadly) non-fictional town in its death throes, long rife with corruption,
racism and limp tourist attractions (Grant Slept Here)."
- MOUVEMENT NOUVEAU, GERMANY
"Our weekly interview has gone deep into Southern U.S.: Cairo, Illinois, is a real ghost town. That's
where Stace England has recorded his third solo cd, featuring many ghosts from the past and from the present too."
- MESCALINA, ITALY
"The history is told beautifully and each song is sung in a musical style that has been tailored to the
story."
“Stace England has maintained a firm creative focus on southern Illinois for most of his adult life.
His focus has been kept on the area because of a certain vibe the musician says the area emanates. That vibe reaches
all the way down to Cairo, a small town at the southernmost tip of Illinois, which has served as the inspiration for England's
latest CD, Greetings from Cairo."
|
|
|
|