Rootsy, Classic 50’s Rock’n Roll And Rock-A-Billy, Mixed Together With Blues And Country
Songliste Goin’ To The City, Then I Found You, Hot-Rod-Rockin, She Tears Me Up, How Long You Gonna Tease Me, You Make It They Take It, Gone, Tore Up, Powershake, Alcohol Of Fame, Long Way To Town, Just A Matter Of Time.
Line Up: Dave Gonzales – Guitar / Vocals Thomas Yearsley – Bass Brian Fahey – Drums
Produced By Mark Neill Recorded In San Diego, So.Cal.
„Palvoline No.7, The Seventh Album By The Paladins Is Rootsy, 'Classic' 50's Rock’n Roll And Rock-A-Billy, Mixed Together With Blues And Country. It’s A Tasty 'Hybrid' That Has Always Made The Paladins Quite Different From Most Rock-A-Billy Bands.”
File Under Rock-A-Billy, That Has Always Been San Diego’s Paladins ‘Fate.’ For A Threesome With Quiffs And All That, It Was Of Course The Easiest Categorization. Didn’t The Legendary Johnny Burnette And The Rock ’N Roll Trio Just Look Like That? And Didn’t They Define What The Sound Of Rock-A-Billy Was All About? They Sure Did. But Was It Always True In The Case Of The Paladins As Well? Not Really, As They Have Always Gone Way Beyond The Rock-A-Billy Idiom. Their New Album Palvoline No.7—Indeed Their Seventh—Actually Marks The First Time In Their Almost Two-Decade Long Career That Sound-Wise They Virtually Focus On Old-School Rock-A-Billy. At Least On Record That Is, Because They Definitely Hail From The Early ‘80s Us Neo-Rock-A-Billy Scene