| 1. Dobro Rhumba [Instrumental] |
| 2. Just Ain't |
| 3. Coyote Song (A.K.A. Montana Cowboy) |
| 4. Foggy Mountain Rock [Instrumental] |
| 5. Don't Look Now |
| 6. Southbound |
| 7. Sunny Side of Life |
| 8. Wedding Bells |
| 9. No Doubt About It |
| 10. I'll Be All Smiles Tonight [Instrumental] |
| 11. I'm Gonna Love You One More Time |
| 12. Flatt Lonesome [Instrumental] |
| 13. Preachin', Prayin', Singin' |
| 14. Dobro Chimes [Instrumental] |
Sings & Plays Dobro,Gene Wooten,Pinecastle,Bluegrass,Country,Folk,Pop,Progressive Bluegrass,Traditional Bluegrass
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Reverie
Inga Swearingen , and The Bill Peterson Trio Manufacturer: Rhythome ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000CAFUKI Release Date: 2005-06-01 |
Tracks:
- Tiptoes
- Black Crow
- Reverie
- Where Flamingos Fly
- Stargazer
- Down by the Riverside
- Happy to Be
- Sunrise
- Stompin' at the Savoy
- Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most
- Beautiful Love
- Just In Time
- My One and Only Love
Product Description
Intimate, beautiful & strong - Inga Swearingen sings and scats with the Bill Peterson Trio on "Reverie" so comfortably that every note, chord, beat and breath will pull you in closer.Customer Reviews:
She does it again.......2007-01-29
Inga sings and swings.......2006-07-09
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Abbey Sings Abbey
Abbey Lincoln Manufacturer: Verve ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000PC1QNI Release Date: 2007-05-22 |
Tracks:
- Blue Monk
- Throw It Away
- And It's Supposed To Be Love
- Should've Been
- The World Is Falling Down
- Bird Alone
- Down Here Below
- The Music Is the Magic
- Learning How To Listen
- The Merry Dancer
- Love Has Gone Away
- Being Me
Album Description
In her oblique, singular trajectory across the multiple currents and trends that have fashioned the incredibly rich and complex landscape of contemporary Afro-American music these past fifty years, Abbey Lincoln has gradually established herself in everyone's eye as the great female voice of the post-free era.
On this new album she performs exclusively personal songs, carefully chosen from the nine recordings she made for Verve over the last fifteen years. With a consummate sense of theatre, alternating slow, crepuscular ballads - almost static in their imperceptible unfolding - and songs of timeless sophistication with melodies that are more archaistic, at the frontiers of country-music and folk, she, using little, almost secret Impressionist touches, recapitulates the skillfully "natural" art of phrasing with all its intimate deployments, breaks and suspensions, revealing the magic spells of a rift that can't be confessed while plucking constantly at the strings of emotion with discretion and restraint and distilling, in its slightest inflexions, melancholy that is literally overwhelming.
Customer Reviews:
Abbey, Where Have You Been All My Life?!.......2007-07-16
abbey sings abbey .......2007-07-09
PAM
Rich, low tones and luxuriously lazy timing........2007-06-05
Her voice, while unmistakeably personal, carries the same bluesy texture and total emotional commitment of a royal line going back to Billie Holiday and beyond.
She's also a fine composer whose bittersweet songs have a strong identity.
Warmly backed by a group featuring cellist Dave Eggar, accordionist Gil Goldstein and Larry Campbell on mandolin and various guitars, she sounds contentedly sad.
The first track, Thelonious Monk's "Blue Monk" (lyrics by Lincoln) is the only historically jazz track on this album but it falls in nicely with the folksy country blues exploration of emotion of the rest of the album.
"Should've Been" is real class while "And It's Supposed To Be Love" is a happy-go-Norah Jones time turn.
There's definitely some voodoo mambo going on with "The Music Is The Magic".
The final track, "Being Me" shows an affirmation of an ending which is a bit of a cliché but that's easy enough to overlook bearing in mind the quality of the rest of the CD.
Larry Campbell's guitar work and Gil Goldstein's accordion really set the scene for this uplifting set for the quiet times in your life, but Abbey is the real star here.
Abbey Lincoln (vocals), Larry Campbell (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, National guitar, pedal steel, mandolin), Scott Colley (bass), Gil Goldstein (accordion), Dave Eggar (cello).
One of the last Vocal Masters from the golden period of Jazz.......2007-05-27
Abbey is a philosopher as much a singer/musician. She has turned in an incredible record as actress, writer and singer. From the looks of the CD cover, she is still a great beauty and now also an elder queen/mother.
Thanks Abbey for giving the gift again. You embrace the heart and engage the intellect. This collection is rooted in tradition, contemporary and timeless. All praises good sister.
AMAZING PERFORMANCES IN NEW MUSICAL SETTINGS.......2007-05-22
The 'Pieces De Resistance', the best of the best, begin with "The World Is Falling Down" which gets a 'blues with a bounce' treatment that is startling but completely effective: a great performance that demonstrates the universality and capabilities of Abbey's music. "Throw It Away" gets the gypsy treatment, re-inventing the delivery and the atmosphere in a wonderful, mesmerizing performance. "Should've Been" is more along the expected jazz/blues arc: a great performance. "Bird Alone" is pure Abbey Lincoln lyrics and delivery. "Down Here Below" is a powerful, searing testament to living through the times and the pain. After decades of shaping her craft and her music within the jazz realm as one of it's 'supreme queens', Abbey Lincoln has created yet another surprise, based on some of her most well-known works and it is FABULOUS. My Highest Recommendation! Five HUGE Stars!!
(This review is based on an iTunes digital download.)
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Burl Ives Sings Little White Duck (And Other Children's Favorites)
Burl Ives Manufacturer: Sony Wonder (Audio) ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000253F Release Date: 1991-07-01 |
Tracks:
- The Little White Duck
- The Little Engine That Could
- Mr. Froggie Went A-Courtin'
- The Donut Song
- Two Little Owls
- Fooba Wooba John
- The Grey Goose
- The Whale
- Buckeye Jim
- The Sow Took The Measles
- The Goat
- Mr. Rabbit
- The Tailor And The Mouse
- Mother Goose Songs
Customer Reviews:
Oldie but Goodie.......2007-03-28
Great songs.......2006-05-16
Burl Ives Sings A Little White Duck.......2006-03-15
Beloved songs.......2006-02-01
a baby-boomer classic!.......2005-02-28
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Judy Collins Sings Lennon & McCartney
Judy Collins Manufacturer: Wildflower ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000QFAEJG Release Date: 2007-07-17 |
Tracks:
- And I Love Her
- Blackbird
- Golden Slumbers
- Penny Lane
- Norwegian Wood
- When I'm Sixty-Four
- Good Day Sunshine
- Hey Jude
- We Can Work It Out
- Yesterday
- I'll Follow the Sun
- Long And Winding Road
Amazon.com
That the mainstream folk goddess has become quite a formidable torch singer in her golden years should surprise no one. Ms. Collins has always shone brightest as an interpreter of other's songs, from traditional folk tunes to such notable covers as her takes on Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now," Sandy Denny's "Who Knows Where the Time Goes" and Sondheim's "Send in the Clowns." Not far from 70 years of age at the time of this album's release, Ms. Collins lends a gentle irony to her reading of "When I'm 64." But her voice is clear; it's as youthful and plaintive as it's been in years. And on tracks like "Norwegian Wood" and "Blackbird," it's flat-out gorgeous. Ably backed by studio musicians Larry Campbell, Tony Levon, and Zev Katz, these jazzy renditions of your favorite Beatle numbers--though where's "Revolution"?--are simply a delight. Buy it for your mom, but treat yourself to a listen first. --Mike McGonigalCustomer Reviews:
Take a sad song and make it better"?.......2007-07-17
"And I Love Her" and "Norwegian Wood" suffer from too much loud background music and should be remixed.
Ms. Collins faces the dilemma that everyone faces when he or she records music that the original group or singer has already made famous. While her arrangements of these familiar songs are perfectly fine, she does not improve on the originals. No one will ever sing "When I'm Sixty-four" and "Yesterday" better than the Beatles for the precise reason that they sang beautifully together. (The women who did a tribute album to Dolly Parton had the same problem a few years ago.) In a word, it is a lot easier to improve on a song sung by Bob Dylan or Leonard Cohen than John Lennon and Paul McCartney. On the other hand, that a singer in her sixth decade is still singing and doing it so beautifully is cause for rejoicing.
While this is not Ms. Collins' best CD (I would give that to the outrageously wonderful "Who Knows Where the Times Goes"), her tribute to Lennon-McCartney is certainly worth listening to and far better than what most of her contemporaries are recording.
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Ella Fitzgerald Sings The Cole Porter Songbook
Ella Fitzgerald Manufacturer: Polygram Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000047EG Release Date: 1997-06-24 |
Tracks:
- All Through The Night
- Anything Goes
- Miss Otis Regrets
- Too Darn Hot
- In The Still Of The Night
- I Get A Kick Out Of You
- Do I Love You?
- I'm Always True To You In My Fashion
- Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)
- Just One Of Those Things
- Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
- All Of You
- Begin The Begiune
- Get Out Of Town
- I Am In Love
- From This Moment On
Tracks:
- I Love Paris
- You Do Something To Me
- Ridin' High
- Easy To Love
- It's All Right With Me
- Why Can't You Behave?
- What Is This Thing Called Love?
- You're The Top
- Love For Sale
- It's De-Lovely
- Night And Day
- Ace In The Hole
- So In Love
- I've Got You Under My Skin
- I Concentrate On You
- Don't Fence Me In
- You're The Top (Alternative Take)
- I Concentrate On You (Alternative Take)
- Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love) (Alternative Take)
Amazon.com
Long considered a jewel in Verve Records' very impressive crown, Fitzgerald's songbook collections of various composers--a series that was started by the success of this set--are all wonderful, but her natural wit and intelligence was at its most perfect with Cole Porter's erudite, urbane songs. While not as scat-oriented as her small group outings, these Porter sets offer her most realized pop performances. Also, the gold remastering does a fine job of bringing out the nuances in the arrangements, making this a treasure for the serious collector and the casual listener alike. A true American music gem. --Skip HellerCustomer Reviews:
I Love Ella in Paris!.......2007-01-30
another Christmas carol after this started playing.
This not only has Ella's great vocals, but it has songs
that everyone, at least everyone of my age, knows
and loves. On a trip to Paris we listened
to it every evening in our apartment while sipping our wine and watching
the barges glide down the Seine. When Ella sang "I Love
Paris", that did it for my friend. She bought it as soon as she got back home.
A Best Seller in Heaven.......2007-01-06
Vaishali, Naples, FL
The First Lady of Song Sings Cole Porter Gems.......2006-12-13
"What it is we recognize and enjoy as distinctively "Cole Porter" in Cole Porter lyric? Actually there are many great things in Porter lyrics and this gives them a continuing charm by always giving us something new to discover. But there is a key trait or quality that is paramount in a Porter lyric. It is intelligence that is the reigning force in Porter, putting all his facts, facilities and philosophies into the right balance to make good entertainment. And that, after all, is his purpose." ~ Fred Lounsberry ~
This two-CD-set presents the very best of Cole Porter songs as interpreted by the legendary songbird, Ella Fitzgerald at her best, and arranged and conducted by Buddy Bregman so remarkably wonderful. It's one of the best-ever Songbook series she recorded. This set offers a compilation of the most popular Cole Porter gems from stage shows and motion pictures from 1929 thru 1954, except for one track, "Miss Otis Regrets," which is neither from stage nor screen.
Cole Porter was one of the few great songwriters who can creatively write a song by himself and didn't need a songwriting partner. He was at par with Irving Berlin and Frank Loesser in that category. In these recordings, his songs really shine through with Ella Fitzgerald's beautiful interpretations, from "Begin The Beguine," "Do I Love You" and "Every Time We Say Goodbye" to "You Do Something To Me," "Easy To Love" and "I Concentrate On You."
This is essential not only to all Ella Fitzgerald and Cole Porter fans, but also to anyone who loves the Songbook series.
A collector's item.
I LOVE THIS WOMAN!!!.......2006-09-02
new ella fitzgerald fan.......2006-07-03
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Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul
Otis Redding Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002IHD Release Date: 1991-06-11 |
Tracks:
- Ole Man Trouble
- Respect
- A Change Is Gonna Come
- Down In The Valley
- I've Been Loving You Too Long
- Shake
- My Girl
- Wonderful World
- Rock Me Baby
- Satisfaction
- You Don't Miss Your Water
Amazon.com essential recording
Otis Blue has always been that rarest of beasts: a '60s soul album that could actually have been made as an album, rather than as a slapdash assortment of singles and fillers. The point being that there is no filler among these eleven classic Redding tracks that range from the crisp stomp of "Respect" and the Stones' "Satisfaction" to the touching pop of the Temps "My Girl" and Sam Cookes "Wonderful World"--not forgetting, of course, the heart-rending anguish of "Ole Man Trouble" and "I've Been Loving You Too Long." Otis Blue captures Redding at the very peak of his raw, unpolished powers, with the peerlessly punchy backing of Booker T. and the MGs. --Barney HoskynsCustomer Reviews:
Otis!.......2007-02-23
****3/4. One of the all-time classic soul records.......2006-07-28
"Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul" is a bit brief by today's standarts, and I do prefer the Stones' own version of "Satisfaction" to this one, but virtually every thing else is terrific. The arrangements are lean and uncluttered but suitably muscular, and Otis Redding was not the least of the many fine vocalists of soul's "golden age".
Redding is equally convincing on slow, gospel-like tunes like "A Change Is Gonna Come" and up-tempo soul stompers like "Respect", and he receives excellent backing by guitarist Steve Cropper and a tight four-man horn ensemble (two trumpets, two saxes).
Highlights include almost every song. A gritty, grinding "Down In The Valley", a rarely-compiled cover of Sam Cooke's "Wonderful World", the aching ballad "I've Been Loving You Too Long", and "Shake", a driving dance-friendly party tune. Whether or not the blues classic "Rock Me Baby" benefits from this arrangement depends on how you feel about blues to begin with, I guess, but Steve Cropper's playing is certainly very good.
Some of Otis Redding's best self-penned songs are here, like "Ole Man Trouble" and the aforementioned "Respect" and "I've Been Loving You Too Long", and while a good case can be made for the "Dock Of The Bay" being Redding's best original album, I think this one deserves a tie at least.
"Otis Blue" should not be missing from any self-respecting soul collection. Music collection, really.
It's got a beat and you can dance to it. Ot just sit there alternately swaying and bopping your head like a deranged pigeon.
Oddly overrated classic soul LP.......2006-05-23
Side A is much stronger than side B, and contains all of the original material Redding brought to this session. As expected, the three originals are all outstanding. "I've Been Loving You Too Long" is a justly famous, dynamic torch ballad; "Ole Man Trouble" (repeated, perhaps to more poignant effect, on DOCK OF THE BAY) receives a cavernous arrangement, anchored to a dissonant Steve Cropper riff, with lyrics of overwhelming despair. And the version here of "Respect" is sleeker and punchier than Aretha's, although necessarily it lacks much feminist interest. I prefer it anyway.
There are also three Sam Cooke songs, which suggests that Redding might have had a fuller tribute in mind to the then-recently deceased legend. Otis improves on both "Shake" and "A Change is Gonna Come" - the latter is skeletal and gut-wrenching, the former gloriously raunchy. (Despite the album's title, Redding's concerns throughout the album are pretty earthy - a lusty blues showcases Cropper on both sides of the LP, although the performances aren't among Redding's most memorable.)
Side B features a take on "Wonderful World" that is more radical, but not nearly apt or successful as the late-Cooke pieces on Side A. There's also a perfunctory version of "My Girl" that, like the two blues, slows the album's momentum and leads me to wonder why this is usually classed as Redding's masterpiece when discs like THE IMMORTAL OTIS REDDING are just sitting there unnoticed. After an odd (but basically reverent) version of "Satisfaction", complete with fuzz guitar, Redding takes William Bell by the collar and shakes "You Don't Miss Your Water" free, cutting to the quick just as he did with "A Change Is Gonna Come". His rendering of the immortal soul ballad is as eccentric and indispensible as The Byrds'.
Either three-and-a-half or four stars. DOCK OF THE BAY, which is just as cheap and is, to a certain extent, cobbled together (side B extracts tunes from three previous Redding LPs and one Stax compilation) is probably a better starter.
Best soul album ever........2005-09-05
All songs are beautiful, contains true soul arrangements without
frequent and disruptive background vocals.
Redding is in top form. His songs like Respect or I've Been Loving You Too Long are great and his covers like Satisfaction or Down in the walley too.
This is essential music for every soul fans.
Note: I have this album on mono.
Not even a compilation, just great.......2005-08-30
You won't hear a lot of the great Redding/Cropper compositions because there are only three.
It starts with one of the best Redding openings. The choppy, on first hearing not to good, intro of 'Ole Man Trouble'. But you will never forget it.
Song 2 has been made more famous by Aretha Franklin, but Otis' rendition of his own 'Respect' has a different meant and a great horn part in the pumping intro followed by Donald Dunn's great bassline.
There are three Sam Cooke songs on this album, the first being the anthem 'A Change is Gonna Come'. As a great Sam Cooke fan I have to admit that Otis gives such a gutwrenching all out performance that is rivals Cooke's version.
'Down in the Valley' has a great bass/piano beat, it may not be the best song on the album, but it's still very good.
Track 5 is an Otis standard, the great 'I've been loving you too long', one of his best vocal/ballad performances.
Another Cooke song is 'Shake' recorded a lot wilder than Cooke did. This may actually be closer to what Cooke intended but he was of course bound by record label rules. If he had put this on his 'live at the harlem square club' album it would probably have sounded like this.
'My Girl' is a song that everybody will know and the same goes for Cooke's 'Wonderful World' which is one of the best covers of this song.
'Rock Me Baby' is one the bluesiest songs Otis ever recorded and it rivals the BB King Original, helped by the rumbling bass beat.
Otis gives a great and original version of the Stones' 'Satisfaction'. It's the horns that make the song.
The slower 'You Don't Miss Your Water' ends the album. An 11 song sample of Otis' many talents is over.
Great album
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Bette Midler Sings The Rosemary Clooney Songbook
Bette Midler Manufacturer: Sony/ Columbia ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000BYMYK Release Date: 2003-09-30 |
Tracks:
- You'll Never Know
- This Ole House
- On a Slow Boat to China
- Hey There
- Tenderly
- Come On-A My House
- Mambo Italiano
- Sisters
- Memories of You
- In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening
- White Christmas
Amazon.com
It's nice to see Bette Midler putting her spin on an American classic after less-than-convincing detours through adult-contemporary cheese. This tribute focuses on Rosemary Clooney in the early to mid-1950s--so we don't get any of the fabulous Nelson Riddle material--but it's a fairly strong offering. It was produced and arranged by Midler's old musical director, Barry Manilow--who actually dueted with Clooney on a couple of songs in the 1990s and here replaces Bing Crosby on the duet "On a Slow Boat to China." Mostly, the CD is about hits: "Hey There" and "White Christmas" are done in straightforward manner, while Linda Ronstadt fills in for Rosemary's actual sister Betty on a slinky version of "Sisters." Happily, Midler plays "Come On-A My House" down instead of up (the old Bette would have milked its comic aspect) but the singer lets loose on "Mambo Italiano." That's pretty much the only time the Divine Miss M peeks out from behind Clooney's elegant persona, and it's a delight. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
GREAT, but...........2007-06-26
Great album...five stars for the musical quality. But, 31 minutes is kind of short for a full price album. Also, and this may be picky, the breaks between songs are a bit shorter than I like. Caveats aside, still a super choice. Enjoy.
You can BETTE it'll please ya !!!.......2007-01-23
The album starts off with "You'll Never Know" and Bette begins this song with passion a cappella. The musical arrangement that then joins her is flawless and Bette's voice is strong, vibrant and full of energy. The CD changes gears somewhat for the next track, "This Ole House," which Bette performs with an awesome country twist.
Most of the CD boasts classic ballads that true music aficionados could never forget. These great songs include "On a Slow Boat to China" that offers some great chemistry and banter between Bette Midler and Barry Manilow; "Hey There;" "Tenderly;" "Memories of You;" "In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening" and "White Christmas." Excellent!
"Mambo Italiano" is a fun song and Bette works this number to the hilt with her passion; she communicates her emotions so well for this number. Linda Ronstadt does a great job with Bette for their duet of "Sisters."
The liner notes include great pictures of Bette and Barry Manilow as well as the credits for each song.
Unfortunately, however, although there are eleven songs on this CD, the total running time is barely more than 30 minutes. That's too short a songbook to honor and remember the great Rosemary Clooney. Where are some of the songs Clooney did with Nelson Riddle? Amazon correctly mentions that the focus of the material is too skewed toward the early to mid 1950s. Could a Bette Midler Sings The Rosemary Clooney Songbook, volume 2, come to fruition in the near future? It would sure please this author! Unfortunately, these drawbacks frustrate me so I will take off one star to make this a four star review.
Overall, Bette does a superlative job of honoring Rosemary Clooney with the help of Barry Manilow and Linda Ronstadt. Bette delivers a strong, upbeat and vibrant performance that leaves you wanting more! I agree with the reviewer who writes that this CD will make you want to hear Rosemary's original recordings of these classic songs. Fans of Rosemary Clooney and Bette Midler will definitely enjoy this album; and I highly recommend this CD for fans of classic pop vocals as well.
Excellent.......2006-11-10
This CD is Outstanding.......2006-11-10
We're going to purchase her new Christmas album in hopes that it is equally as great!
Bette is the Bomb.......2006-07-28
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Jones Sings Haggard, Haggard Sings Jones: Kickin' Out the Footlights... Again
George Jones , and Merle Haggard Manufacturer: Bandit Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000HIVQ7Q Release Date: 2006-10-24 |
Tracks:
- Footlights
- The Race Is On
- The Way I Am
- She Thinks I Still Care
- All My Friends Are Strangers
- Things Have Gone To Press
- I Think I'll Just Stay Here And Drink
- Born With The Blues
- Sick, Sober & Sorry
- I Always Get Lucky With You
- Sing Me Back Home
- The Window Above
- You Take Me For Granted
- Don't Get Around Much Anymore
Amazon.com
Nearly 25 years after their last album together (1982's A Taste of Yesterday's Wine), the Possum and the Hag reunite... with a twist. This time, they sing each other's songs. The conceit can be dangerous unless you're playing it for laughs, e.g., Frank Sinatra and Elvis Presley on the former's 1960 television special. But though Jones puts more emotion into interpreting Haggard's songs than Hag reciprocates, these two old legends manage to pull it off. And with the help of producer Keith Stegall (Alan Jackson), they keep the music solid, too, spotlighting steel guitar great Norm Hamlet and celebrated piano sideman Pigg Robbins, who played on many of their original recordings. Jones particularly shines on "The Way I Am," and Haggard proves sublime on "I Always Get Lucky with You." Where the album really lights up, however, is on the duo's pocketful of duets, starting with a poignant and intensely resonant rendition of Haggard's classic aging-musician ballad, "Footlights." Surprisingly, the repertoire never seems tired, and there's a surprise around every corner: Rhonda Vincent adding splendid harmonies on Haggard's new "Born to the Blues" and Jones turning transcendent on a confessional line about being "crazy and lonely." Just as these ragged masters take their leave, they put a little more Western in Duke Ellington's swing ("Don't Get Around Much Anymore"), filling in the middle with a warm, nostalgic banter that reminds listeners just how much these two have seen and done. Who knew hard-luck autobiography could sound so exquisite? --Alanna NashAlbum Description
On this disc the two country music icons take turns singing the other's hit songs. On four songs they team up on duets. The end result is an historic recording enhanced with stellar production by Keith Stegall and an all-star band.Customer Reviews:
DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME !!!!!!!!.......2007-06-29
im suprised ........2007-06-21
Good Ol' Boys being Good Ol' Boys.......2007-03-18
Outstanding idea, well executed!!.......2007-01-19
Velvet Voices.......2007-01-18
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Whitey Ford Sings the Blues
Everlast Manufacturer: © 1998 Tommy Boy Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000AFH2 Release Date: 1998-09-08 |
Tracks:
- The White Boy Is Back
- Money (Dollar Bill)
- Ends
- What It's Like
- Get Down
- Sen Dog
- Tired
- Hot To Death
- Painkillers
- Prince Paul
- Praise The Lord
- Today (Watch Me Shine)
- Guru
- Death Comes Callin'
- Funky Beat
- The Letter
- 7 Years
- Next Man
Amazon.com
When you think about it, House of Pain really were ahead of their time. Tracks like "Jump Around" may have been light on the content side, but they delivered in the production department--they played with sounds in the same way that Missy Elliott and Timbaland have popularized, and they crossed over to a rock audience long before Puffy ever tried it. On Whitey Ford Sings the Blues, Everlast's second solo album, the opening is an appropriation of "The Fat Boys are Back"; a couple of songs favor a sensitive folk-rock touch, with Everlast on guitar; and others reach back for House of Pain's best rock-influenced sounds. Though plenty of others have rhymed over rock and folk tracks, Everlast has a good feel for it and his songs are solid. If this isn't a career album, it's damn close. --Randy SilverCustomer Reviews:
love this cd!!.......2007-06-11
Its like a greastest hits compiled of originals.......2006-05-31
Whitey Ford sometimes sings the blues..........2006-03-14
If i wanted hard core ganster bangin rap I would buy it... from the genre Dodgy rap - however, I wanted something a little more chilled.
When he sings the blues he does it well - and when he runs out of blues material he fills the space with a half baked white boy snoop pup style.
Everlast expands himself, but stays true........2005-08-16
i like this album.....truth for a change.......2005-05-07
people have become blind to things in life and take them for granted
and thats what this whole ablum is about and i suggest you buy this album
"then you might really know what it's like"
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Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely
Frank Sinatra Manufacturer: Capitol ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000006OHF Release Date: 1998-05-26 |
Tracks:
- Only The Lonely
- Angel Eyes
- What's New?
- It's A Lonesome Old Town
- Willow Weep For Me
- Good-Bye
- Blues In The Night
- Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
- Ebb Tide
- Spring Is Here
- Gone With The Wind
- One For My Baby
- Sleep Warm
- Where Or When
Amazon.com essential recording
Look past the tacky, sad-clown velvet painting on the cover (a Grammy-winner for album design in 1959!), there's nothing cheap or sentimental about this record--the bleakest and blackest album of popular songs ever recorded, so quietly powerful it can leave you slumped in your chair with the ice cubes still rattling in your glass. Every single "suicide song" (as Sinatra liked to call 'em) on Only the Lonely is a stunner that will take your breath away. Nelson Riddle's arrangements are like shadows, almost colorless and motionless, so that all you hear is the ache in the singer's voice. "Angel Eyes" and "One for My Baby" each deserve an album to themselves-- so exquisitely moving that at the end of three minutes you feel like you've just heard a lifetime of loneliness. My only regret--and it's a big one--is that this flawless masterpiece doesn't include Billy Strayhorn's "Lush Life," which truly belongs here; Sinatra put it into an already overcrowded recording schedule and, when fatigue and the difficulty of the song defeated him after a couple takes, he gave up and never attempted it again. We got the chillingly lovely "Willow Weep For Me" instead, so I'm really not complaining--but that just adds to the pang of loss that this album expresses so vividly. Drink up! --Jim EmersonCustomer Reviews:
Stunningly Unsurpassable.......2007-05-25
The Greatest Album of All Time.......2007-05-02
My only beef is on the recording of Where or When. At the end, when Frank hits the last note, his voiced gets very tinny and lost in the orchestral arrangement. Anyone else agree?
not just for the lonely.......2007-01-30
Each track makes you feel the heartache he is going through.
All the songs on this CD are aptly chosen,the usual timing,phraseing& diction which have become the hallmark of the greatest vocalist of the 20th & 21st century.
Sit them up Joe.......2006-11-06
Only His Best.......2006-07-03
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