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EXCLAIM!
CANADA's MUSIC AUTHORITY, JULY 2008
WOOD,
WIRES, & WHISKEY
COUNTRY, FOLK, & BLUES REVIEWS
TIM
HUS
BUSH PILOT BUCKAROO
By Kerry Doole
It makes perfect sense that Tim Hus now shares a record
label with Ian Tyson and Corb Lund. He’s another
Albertan country troubadour, cut from the same cloth —
hard-worn denim — as those two. Both Tyson and Lund
have endorsed Hus’s work and if you’re a Corb
fan, chances are excellent Bush Pilot Buckaroo will charm
you too. It’s actually his fourth CD, and the serious
road dues he’s been paying have resulted in a real
tight band sound. “We’re a country band with
a punk attitude and meaningful songs,” claims Hus,
with justification. His approach may be less cerebral
than Lund’s, though lines like, “The mysteries
aren’t written with parchment and quill but branded
forever on the foothills breeze” (“The Great
Divide”) do show literary flair. There is no mistaking
the conviction in his voice and the honesty of his character
portraits. Subjects range from Northern highways, pick-up
trucks, bush pilots and truckers to homesick Maritimers
and hockey moms (the latter on a cover of the Stompin’
Tom classic). A fine version of Steve Fromholtz’s
“Man With the Big Hat” features another Western
hero, Gary Fjellgaard, but Hus’s originals are equally
strong. His one slip here is the novelty-esque feel of
the lyrics to “Bakersfield Music,” but that’s
a little bump on an impressively smooth flight. (Stony
Plain)
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Tim Hus Music Copyright 2008
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