• Home
  • Spotlight
  • News
  • Music Store
    • Grave Danger
    • Blood Spasm
    • Ice9
    • Kevin Daly
    • Loren Dircks / Gila Bend
    • Blue Collar Criminals / Last Laugh
    • Last Call Brawlers
    • Justin Valdez
  • Podcasts
  • Contact Us
 Tucson Records & Productions                            

   Justin Valdez 

Picture




 
Picture
Like on Facebook
Picture
Follow on Twitter
 

ComScore
 

 

 

Picture
Justin Valdez y Los Tortilla Makers - Ladies Chonies
Available in Small, Medium, Large and Extra Large. Please specify the desired size when ordering.
$
10.00    
 

Justin Valdez y Los Tortilla Makers - Sticker
2.25" x 5" Vinyl Sticker
$
1.00    
 

Deuce-Seven Off Suit
Los Muertos Records 2012
$
10.00    
 

1. Yah-ta-Hey!
2. Little By Little
3. Bean Dip For Two
4. In the Van
5. She
6. 18, Eighteen Wheelers
7. La Llorona
8. Yaqui Sieras
9. Whatever Happened to Music?
10. Wild Side
11. Custer's Last (One Night) Stand
12. A Little Bit Louder
 


Click here for the MP3 Download Special Only $8.99!

Picture

ALBUM REVIEW

Last Call Brawlers guitarist Justin Valdez goes solo, indulging in revved-up Tex-Mex, boisterous country punk and humorous lyrics that occasionally verge on the inappropriate. Depending on your point of view, these might include culturally specific tunes such as "Ya-Ta-Hey," "Yaqui Sieras," "Custer's Last (One Night) Stand" and "Bean Dip for Two." The best cuts are those that allow Valdez to showcase his tight, lean guitar-playing: the deep, baritone-sounding leads on "Little by Little" and the choogling rockabilly of "She." On "In the Van," punctuated by boisterous off-key gang vocals, he trades reverb-drenched licks with saxophonist David Clark. That tune draws on classic musical references such as "Wooly Bully" and "Whittier Blvd.," though it doesn't reach either song's pioneering levels of frenzy. Valdez doesn't claim to be a deep satirist. In the process of lamenting the state of punk rock, country pop, Top 40 and TV singing contests on "Whatever Happened to Music?" he describes his own song as "simple and corny." Sometimes his songwriting slips from sly comedy to unashamed novelty.  He doesn't take himself too seriously, as evidenced by that faux cornpone-cum-Elvis drawl in which he usually sings. He frames the opening track with applause and bar chatter, as if he were a stand-up comedian in a nightclub, and the closer is an actual joke with strummed guitar.  Whether on the moody heartache of "La Llorona" or the bouncy Tejano-style interpretation of Freddy Fender's "Wild Side of Life," Valdez seems to be wholly enjoying himself. The vibe is infectious.
  --Gene Armstrong, The Tucson Weekly


 www.tucsonweekly.com/tucson/justin-valdez-deuce-seven-off-suit-los-muertos 


Picture
© 2013 Tucson Records & Productions, LLC. All Rights Reserved.       Privacy Policy       Site Use       Advertise
  • Home
  • Spotlight
  • News
  • Music Store
    • Grave Danger
    • Blood Spasm
    • Ice9
    • Kevin Daly
    • Loren Dircks / Gila Bend
    • Blue Collar Criminals / Last Laugh
    • Last Call Brawlers
    • Justin Valdez
  • Podcasts
  • Contact Us