DEE MULLINS
CONTINUING STORY, THE
Possessing a fine set of tonsils and an ear for a great song, Dee Mullins should have been a country music superstar, but it just never was, Recording for Shelby Singleton's Plantation and SSS labels during the twilight of the 1960s Mullins cut an astounding catalogue of music that is presented here for the first time on CD, Perhaps just a little too philosophical and a little too dark for mass consumption "I Am The Grass" burns brightly as an incredible collision of Nashville and Psychedelia. "War Baby" hauntingly chronicles one man's path to combat amid a century of strife and conflict, Other highlights include the effecting "Texas Tea", the chilling "The Big Man", the prisoner's plea for redemption in "The Next Face I See" and perhaps one of the oddest of |