The DeSotos are Paul
Gurney guitars & lead vocals; Stuart McIntyre bass & vocals; Ron Stevens Hammond organ, keyboards, acoustic guitar
& vocals and Michael Burrows, drums and based in Auckland, New Zealand.
The new album, Your Highway For Tonight, released May 2, 2011, features 14 new songs from The DeSotos, including the full length version of Hearts in One Place, the theme music to the TVNZ series 'North'
Track listing: Hearts In One Place, Paid In Full, Fat Man's Lodge, Dysfunction, Runnin', Can't Go Back, In the Harbour, Neon Light, Suny Day, You, Running On The Spot, Mr Timeshare, What We Do, World's Below. Catalogue details for ordering are: Your Highway For Tonight by The DeSotos - Tailgator Music / Ode Records 2011 - CDMANU5114
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The 2008 13 track album Cross Your Heart has been described by one
reviewer as '... a powerful blend of rock-infused country-blues' and is in stores nationwide.
Track listing: '59 Cadillac, The Spirit, Greedy
Men, Invisible, Offline, Lonely Star, Rollercoaster, Sat On A Mountain, Crazy
World, Love Lost Time, Summer Wine, When You Dance, Goodbye. Catalogue
details for ordering are:
Cross Your Heart
by The DeSotos - Tailgator Music / Ode Records 2008 -
CDMANU5038
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Here are a couple of reviews of
Cross Your Heart:
Steve Scott of the
Waikato Times:
(House and Lifestyle, August 2008)
Every once in a while, an album arrives and instantly commands your
attention. Auckland band, The DeSotos is such a band.
From the very beginning, The DeSotos don't disappoint. They
are illuminating with a powerful blend of rock-infused country-blues.
The musicians that make up this band – Paul Gurney, Rex McLeod, Stuart
McIntyre and Ron Stevens – reveal a strong chemistry that celebrates a
rockin' spirit of musical communion.
Tracks including The Spirit, Greedy Men, Invisible and Goodbye, are
timeless, perfectly arranged and delivered in earnest and, at times,
harmonic tones.
Other compositions, including Sat on a Mountain, with blazing harmonica from
Midge Marsden and Love Lost Time featuring a lead guitar highlight recalling
the late Duane Allman's Eat a Peach period, reveals The DeSotos have struck
gold with Cross Your Heart.
One of the finest debuts I have heard this year.
Graham Reid (NZ Herald Time Out)
Named after the classic car (and not presumably the explorer) this
Auckland-based outfit peel off a substantial slice of professionally
delivered, wide-screen country-rock which owes much to the
Petty/Springsteen/Neil Young and Travelling Wilburys axis, and mostly kicks
things up a notch from the Warratahs.
With a couple of writers in their ranks there is also a pleasing diversity
here, although sometimes they reference their influences just a little too
much for any accusations of originality to be thrown.
When they nail something of their own - the tense jangle of The Spirit,
the tight churn of Greedy Men, the heartfelt Offline - they
offer songs which are classy and fully formed.
From the opener 59 Cadillac through to the ballads in the closing
overs, this is enjoyable rockin' country music full of twang and backbeat
which sounds even better when a ribbon of highway stretches out ahead and
you are in no hurry.
As the opener says, 'there ain't nothin' like rain on a two lane, driving
fast with the radio on'.
Well, someone's already supplying the rain, The DeSotos have the soundtrack.