Eric Brace & Peter Cooper

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
I Know A Bird 00:00 Tools
Down To The Well 00:00 Tools
Denali, Not McKinley 00:00 Tools
Wait a Minute 00:00 Tools
The First In Line 00:00 Tools
Suffer a Fool 00:00 Tools
The Man Who Loves to Hate 00:00 Tools
Missoula Tonight 00:00 Tools
Lucky Bones 00:00 Tools
Ponzi Scheme 00:00 Tools
Drinking From A Swimming Pool 00:00 Tools
I Know Better Now 00:00 Tools
I Wish We Had Our Time Again 00:00 Tools
Her Bright Smile Haunts Me Still 00:00 Tools
Ancient History 00:00 Tools
Yesterdays and Used to Be's 00:00 Tools
Kissing Booth 00:00 Tools
I Flew Over Our House Last Night 00:00 Tools
Mad 00:00 Tools
Johnson City 00:00 Tools
Just The Other Side Of Nowhere 00:00 Tools
Boxcars 00:00 Tools
She Can't Be Herself 00:00 Tools
Nobody Knows 00:00 Tools
Big Steve 00:00 Tools
Rain Just Falls 00:00 Tools
Silent Night 00:00 Tools
Circus 00:00 Tools
Thompson Street 00:00 Tools
Nice Old Man 00:00 Tools
Sailor 00:00 Tools
Carolina 00:00 Tools
Behind Your Back 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Me 00:00 Tools
Omar's Blues 00:00 Tools
Omar's Blues #2 00:00 Tools
John Wilkes Booth 00:00 Tools
C&O Canal 00:00 Tools
Boulder to Birmingham 00:00 Tools
He Rode All the Way to Texas 00:00 Tools
Blue Ridge 00:00 Tools
Big Stebe 00:00 Tools
If That's the Way You Feel 00:00 Tools
Rainy Night in Texas 00:00 Tools
Down To Well 00:00 Tools
Been Awhile 00:00 Tools
Love Was the Price 00:00 Tools
Boat's Up The River 00:00 Tools
Yesterday and Used To Be's 00:00 Tools
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Eric Brace is the frontman of the acclaimed Nashville-based alt-country band Last Train Home. A former music journalist for The Washington Post, Brace collaborates here with another music journalist, Peter Cooper, senior music writer and critic for the Nashville daily, The Tennessean. Eric and Peter have been friends since Eric's move to Nashville in 2004, a friendship that was solidified in Peter's living room listening to Tom T. Hall, Willis Alan Ramsey, the Seldom Scene, Charley Pride while pouring screw top red wine. Pretty soon they were playing guitars and singing songs together—first in that same living room, then on tour: Europe, Alaska, and the Lower 48 too. Then came the recording sessions for "You Don't Have to Like Them Both," where some of the greatest musicians in Nashville lent their skills to songs of Eric's and Peter's, as well as covers by Jim Lauderdale, Todd Snider, Kris Kristofferson and others. http://redbeetrecords.com/index.htm Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.