| 1. Mount Palomar |
| 2. Green Grass and Blue Skies |
| 3. Summer Will Be Gone |
| 4. Marble Arch |
| 5. Voodoo Summer |
| 6. Every Color's Blue |
| 7. As Free As You |
| 8. Twenty Four |
| 9. Sad Day |
| 10. She Say's She's Alright |
| 11. The Dark Side |
| 12. Of Nowhere |
Editorial Reviews
In its three year existence, Minneapolis band Shamus 73 has played to countless people throughout the Midwest. Named after a Burt Reynolds movie, Shamus 73 is comprised of the Munster BrothersIlluminati member Joe on bass and the handsomely tattooed Johnny on drums; guitarist Matt Potts, the thinking man's rock musician; and lonely vocalist Rodney Lynchand revolves around the songwriting axis of Lynch and Potts. Of their songs one critic said, "These are pop songs of an exquisite quality hard to match by any band in the Twin Cities today." Another wrote "Tag-teaming on lyrics, melodies, and arrangements, the Lynch/Potts consortium produce 3 minute power pop nuggets that pull the listener into simple yet universal themes."
The band lists The Beatles, Richard Thompson, Beach Boys, Tim Hardin, The Flying Burrito Brothers and The Jam as influences. Their sound has been described by fans as "Wilco meets Oasis" and "Mod Country."
Shamus 73 received accolades for their debut album "Growing In My Mind." One review said "Shamus 73 frame their straight-ahead song writing with discipline, passion, and hooks that never stop... Everything about Shamus 73's "Growing in my Mind" feels good ... These boys from the northern tundra are damn good...Shamus 73 reminds me painfully of how much I miss the original and unique flavor of the Minnesota music scene."
Shamus 73 offers a blend of the old and new, delivering their message to an ever growing group of fans one song at a time.
Bright,Shamus 73,LPM Records,Country,Country Mod, Retro-fitted rock ready to be branded onto your heart.,Rock
Average customer rating:
|
Cassadaga
Bright Eyes Manufacturer: Saddle Creek ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000N60HCW Release Date: 2007-04-10 |
Tracks:
- Clairaudients (Kill or Be Killed)
- Four Winds
- If The Brakeman Turns My Way
- Hot Knives
- Make A Plan To Love Me
- Soul Singer In A Session Band
- Classic Cars
- Middleman
- Cleanse Song
- No One Would Riot For Less
- Coat Check Dream Song
- I Must Belong Somewhere
- Lime Tree
Amazon.com
On their sixth and most straightforwardly clean album, Nebraska's Bright Eyes once again integrate a revolving cast of players to the mix, including Portland tunesmith M. Ward and alt-country queen Gillian Welch. But the band remains at the helm of forever-wunderkind Conor Oberst, and the fruitful songwriter has one-upped 2005's I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning with a proficient and accessible ensemble of expansive pop orchestrations and ornate folk songs that chronicle his traverses across the American panorama. Oberst's voice quakes and wanders through South Dakota lore and Sunshine State chicanery, always the perfect vehicle for his threadbare lyrics. "Take the fruit from the tree/Break the skin with your teeth/Is it bitter or sweet/All depends on your timing," he forewarns in "Cleanse Song," a psychedelic merry-go-round of a soundtrack that joins the Scottish-tinged "Soul Singer in a Session Band" and singalong single "Four Winds" as Cassadaga's finest. The 13-song-record is certain to open more doors for a band whose recognition has soared with every release since Oberst was just 14. --Scott HolterAlbum Description
Once tagged "rock's boy genius" by the music press, Conor Oberst turns 27 on February 15th and even without that in mind it's hard to listen to Cassadaga without hearing a newfound sophistication to the Bright Eyes sound. Producer, multi-instrumentalist and permanent band member Mike Mogis has crafted a swirling, euphonious record, at times bursting with bombastic confidence and country swagger, and at others loose-limbed and mesmeric. Trumpet and piano player Nate Walcott, a Bright Eyes player since 2003 and now the third permanent member, is responsible for the cinematic string arrangements. Other than a handful of live appearances and the release of a collection of B-sides & rarities, Bright Eyes kept mostly out of sight in 2006 after the busy 2005 which saw the simultaneous release of the sister albums Digital Ash In A Digital Urn and I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning. Should you have looked for them you'd have found them tucked away in various studios around the country. Recording for the first time outside of the Lincoln, NE studio belonging to Mogis, the Bright Eyes cast of players were busy in studios in Portland, OR, New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. The result is the band's most confident work so far, an album so full of soaring strings and female harmonies that it feels almost buoyant in comparison to previous releases. While many latched onto the smattering of political commentary in 2005's I'm Wide Awake..., Cassadaga is less blunt in its depiction of youthful exasperation in the Bush era. References to Hurricane Katrina, holy wars and polar ice-caps may crop up, but they're buried deep amongst the ruminations on life, love, history, death and the afterlife. If I'm Wide Awake... was "the New York City album", then Cassadaga is "the America album", in which Oberst diaries his travels around the country and articulates his sense of history in the landscape. In first single "Four Winds" he is "off to old Dakota where genocide sleeps/in the Black Hills, the Badlands, the calloused East/I buried my ballast, I made my peace." Cassadaga itself crops up in the same song. The town, a community for psychics in central Florida, is visited in order to "commune with the dead". This wandering spirit is crystalized in "I Must Belong Somewhere" a song which was already a staple of live shows by the end of the 2005. "Hot Knives" is particularly spirited, bringing to mind the true energy of a Bright Eyes show. Likewise, "Soul Singer In A Session Band" - a rousing paean to an oxymoronic profession - enlists all of the elements which make the Bright Eyes live band such a euphoric experience. "Make A Plan To Plan To Love Me" is Bright Eyes at their most playful; a straight-up love song, replete with girl group vocals and Burt Bacharach strings. Oberst, the fumbling guitarist whose impassioned prose tumbles out under stark stage spotlights, is still recognizable in every track, but the songs are rich with elaborate production, cinema-sized orchestration and, at times, sprawling, almost psychedelic, atmospherics. The line up of Bright Eyes players includes Andy Lemaster (Now It's Overhead), Ben Kweller, Gillian Welch, David Rawlings, Janet Weiss (ex-Sleater Kinney), Jason Boesel (Rilo Kiley), John McEntire (Tortoise) M.Ward, Maria Taylor and Rachael Yamagata.Customer Reviews:
Cassadaga by Bright Eyes.......2007-07-09
Perfect.......2007-07-04
A Fun Trip to Cassadaga.......2007-07-03
I am so glad to make Mr Obert's musical acquaintance..........2007-06-25
When I first saw the video for Four Winds I didn't get it. I thought the video was clever set in a county fair pavillion. Then the more I watched it the more I listened to the lyrics. Holy Cow! THe lyrics of this song alone is so well smithed that the country sounding backdrop started to melt away, which usually is a distraction for me (since I listen to more electronic based music). I broke down and bought the album after reading the rave reviews here.
The CD in its entirety is an amazing treat of sonics and feels. The lyrical genius shines through on each and every track. The music is so well composed and executed that I feel right in the music every time I listen to the CD. Absolute brilliance.
And the mixing and production on this gem is top notch as well.
My favorite tracks have got to be Four Winds, Soul Singer In A Session Band, Coat Check Dream Song and I Must Belong Somewhere, although every track has a distinctive merit.
I'm not sure what's wrong with me ..........2007-06-19
I was wrong, this album is really fantastic! I guess I'm just slow.
Average customer rating:
|
Turn On the Bright Lights
Interpol Manufacturer: Matador Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006BTCA Release Date: 2002-10-08 |
Tracks:
- Untitled
- Obstacle 1
- NYC
- PDA
- Say Hello To The Angels
- Hands Away
- Obstacle 2
- Stella Was A Diver And She Was Always Down
- Roland
- The New
- Leif Erikson
Amazon.com
Interpol create literate, atmospheric, moody, trashy post-punk music that recalls '80s faves the Psychedelic Furs. And this is definitely a good thing. While most young bands are content to rhyme "make it" with "fake it," Interpol pens melodramatic tales of tortured and tortuous urban relationships that are truly refreshing. Like their peers the Strokes, they're bright, sophisticated, and meticulous enough to build stirring soundscapes. Turn On the Bright Lights is a must for anyone who missed Echo & the Bunnymen, the Furs, and Joy Division the first time around. --Dominic WillsAlbum Description
Australian version of the absolutely stunning full-length debut from New York's Interpol. Think Joy Division meets Psychedelic Furs, Echo & the Bunnymen and the Smiths. Includes the bonus track, 'Specialist'. Matador. 2002.Album Details
The Stunning Debut Album that Incorporates So Many Postpunk Influences: Joy Division, Television, Morrissey, . Includes the Bonus Track "Specialist".Customer Reviews:
"My best friend's a butcher, he has sixteen knives.".......2007-07-13
The first track is my favorite. The piano blends with the guitar and works well with the rest of the sounds. "Obstacle 1" is a good single, since it encapsulates their sound quite well and is one of the better songs. "NYC" is a slower song and fairly enjoyable. "PDA" is another good single that represents the band well. The thing is, most of the songs do a good job here, because they all sound pretty similar. "Obstacle 2" has catchy vocals and nice interaction with the instruments. Towards the end there are a couple tracks over six minutes long that show a bit more range from the band as they experiment a little. "Roland" might be the hardest track, with a good riff in the chorus. All in all, not a whole lot about the album really stands out from the rest but it is a consistent, good album.
This album has 286 5 star reviews and it's still comes up as a 4 star album!!!!!!!.......2007-07-09
It's like learning a new language..........2007-05-29
What's more, with each song I grew increasingly interested in the music and slowly drifted from my environment, finding myself enjoying the ride. The road rage that I had started slipping away with each passing of familiar street signs. Imagine a perfect harmony of landscape blended with poetry for my ears. Surely this can't be one of the rare albums that I can listen to throughout its entirety, I pondered, and anticipated. In the end I wasn't let down. With each repeated listen (that's the trick I think, one would have to give this multiple consecutive hearings in order to fully appreciate it), I realized I started developing feelings for the album.
Feelings?
Ah, but let me tell you why.
Each song tells a story, and when I'm told a story, I want it to be as intoxicating, as dreamy and as atmospheric as each song is on this album. It evokes a mood that's long lost along with childhood, the mood of being afloat, being weightless, being innocent with a sense of discovery. As soon as you hear the opening words, you'll know you're being transferred to a place where you wish time stood still. It's mesmerizing, this album, to say the least. And it is dark, and ambient, and very moody, in all good sense of the words. It is music that evokes the very feelings in me, the longing, the fears, the hopes and the dreams. Whenever I'm in a bad mood or have had a tough day, I play this album and instantly feel better. It has over the years become my best friend, my confidant, my haven, a way to relax and enjoy this thing called life. This album is excellent throughout and that's how one should listen to it, in its entirety, but like anybody else I have my own personal favorites:
The beautifully lush opener "Untitled" really paints a picture for the rest of the album. This song makes me want to renew old friendships with long neglected school chums, "I will surprise you sometime, I'll come round.." It reminds me of the carefree, more fearless days of my youth.
"Obstacle 1" and "PDA" were singles I had heard on the radio that propelled me to buy the album. Both are fast with great guitar and drums. I thought if the rest of the songs sound like the two, it'd be money well spent. Turns out I got every pennies' worth and then some. This record really was the best 13-dollar investment I've ever made.
An early favorite is "Hands Away." This is perhaps the most melodic, most hypnotic song on the album. I was cast under its spell upon hearing the beginning riffs. "Will you put my hands away, will you be my man?..." This song is kinda like "Untitled" in that there are only a handful of lyrics to both the songs but the impact they'll hit you with is immeasurable.
My absolute favorite song in the Interpol catalogue is the wonderfully sexually blatant, yet tender and romantic 7-minute opus called "Stella Was a Diver and She's Always Down." It's flawless, this song. There is not a part in this epic song that I don't like. From the music to the lyrics, it's like a dream, and a nice way of spending seven minutes of one's day, loving "Stella" the way Paul Banks does:
"when she walks down the street, she knows there's people watching
building fronts are just fronts, to hide the people watching her
she once fell through the street, down the man hole in that bad way
the underground drip, was just like her scuba days..."
The last song on the album is called "Leif Erikson" and I find out he's one of the first European settlers to set foot in the States. I don't know what that has to do with the song really, cos to me this song conjures up all kinds of notions and ideals of romance. From Paul's voice and the lyrics to the dreamy surreal atmosphere of the drums and guitars, this the most mesmerizing song of all:
"she says it helps with the lights out
her rabid glow is like braille to the night
she feels that my sentimental side should be held with kids gloves
she doesn't know that I left my urge in the ice box
she swears I'm just prey for the female
well then hook me up and pull me babycakes
cause I like to get hooked
the clock is set for nine but you know you're gonna make it eight
so that you can take some time and teach each other to reciprocate..."
If you're still reading this then tonight's the night. Get romanced by a lil' Interpol and who knows, maybe you'll start harboring feelings too.
Afterall, they're nothing more than feelings.
freaking love this album.......2007-05-18
I just saw them in Las Vegas and they did about four of their new songs off the upcoming album - and everything sounds fabulous! This is going to be a great year for this band.
If Edgar Allen Poe were alive and wrote music now...........2007-02-12
Average customer rating:
|
I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
Bright Eyes Manufacturer: Saddle Creek ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00070FV0M Release Date: 2005-01-25 |
Tracks:
- At The Bottom Of Everything - (with Jim James)
- We Are Nowhere And It's Now - (with Emmylou Harris)
- Old Soul Song (For The New World Order) - (with Emmylou Harris)
- Lua
- Train Under Water
- First Day Of My Life
- Another Travelin' Song
- Landlocked Blues - (with Emmylou Harris)
- Poison Oak
- Road To Joy
Amazon.com
Conor Oberst is running on dangerous ground: getting his first Dylan comparisons at age 12, frolicking with Winona Ryder, releasing two separate albums at once. Didn't he learn anything from Ryan Adams's mistakes? It's a good thing he can write such haunting, intimate songs. I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning (released simultaneously with Digital Ash in a Digital Urn) is the album the Omaha native has always threatened to make, channeling his country rock influences into articulate, witty ballads that come to life with gorgeous harmonies supplied by Emmylou Harris. The tumbling "We Are Nowhere and It's Now" might be his first actual masterpiece, while the words of album closer "Road to Joy" ("I could've been a famous singer if I had someone else's voice/ But failure's always sounded better") indicate that Oberst might have his head screwed on right after all. -- Aidin VaziriAlbum Description
Bright Eyes' Conor Oberst continues to earn his reputation as our most respected young troubadour with almost frightening ease. For the past few years he's been tagged "rock's boy genius" by the music press. These albums are a soundly articulated slice of modern life rolled into two very different records, both bursting with all the heartfelt poetry for which Bright Eyes' records have earned their acclaim. Of course, the rough edges haven't gone away - the palpitation of a splintering note, the crack of a voice as it overextends, the clumsy thump of a misplaced thumb. It's all still there. But there's a glorious new level of depth, a maturation of texture, writing and delivery. His best work yet.Customer Reviews:
one of my top five albums of all time.......2007-06-01
there isn't a track i don't like
crass, a bit bitter, a little drunk.... this album captures the soul of a young man like no other record i have ever heard. this is his document of what it means to move into lower manhattan. this is how it is for him. this is how he sees the world: he questions, he listens, and he looks. (it is called literature)
i am not yet tired of this record, it is full-bodied. it is honest. it is part of my own story as well, only with better background music.
Whatever you do.......2007-02-19
This album is a feat for Oberst - an excellent folk album that everyone can relate to, sing along to, listen to, and love. If you like folk, slow music, Conor Oberst, indie, or life, you've got to listen to this album.
From claustrophobic storytellers ("At the Bottom of Everything") to sad, sweet folkies ("Lua") to simply happy tunes ("First Day of My Life") to joyful/miserable I-love-and-hate-life songs ("Road To Joy"), this CD has something for everyone that's ever felt ecstatic, down, confused, bitter, torn, smitten, terrified, or alive. Bottom line: it's got everything.
Heartfelt, incredible, rich in emotion, and downright brilliant - I'm not exaggerating when I say that this is Oberst's best work to date. If anything of his that comes out surpasses this amazing album, I will die, come back to life, and buy it.
Let's just say that this would be one of the albums that I'd choose if I ever had to answer that stupid "If you were on a desert island and could bring only five CDs, what would you bring?" question.
read my future on the Amazon.com review board.......2007-02-16
The pen is mightier than the sword, I read my future on the Amazon.com review board. People log in to say what they think of me, praise, rag, bitch, and moan for free. Did we buy his s--t at the record store, or just download music for free once more. That's all right, its fine with me, just shut your face and buy the CD. I spill my guts, have done it for free, so praise your God and steal my CD.
Come on Conor, we know you read this stuff. Post a review and write your next song.
great sound.......2007-02-03
"I guess you'd call that painting in a cave...".......2007-01-30
I would probably not be so quick with the Dylan comparisons. I'd probably be more apt to call Oberst kin to Gram Parsons or Jackson Browne, where confessional lyricism was more the point of the song. I also take issue with the emo tag connected to Bright Eyes albums by underage metalheads without the maturity to make the distinction. This is folk music in the seventies sense, maybe a bit more stripped down but still a close cousin to "Late For The Sky" or James Taylor's "Mud Slide Slim." "I'm Wide Awake It's Morning" belongs on the same pantheon as those albums, even with the age difference.
I've also been lucky enough to see Oberst play (in a song circle with Jim James - wow - and M.Ward -eh) at the 2005 Newport Folk Festival. Far from a gallery of screaming teenaged girls that some of the more virulent negative reviews would lead you to think are his core audience, Oberst captivated a huge ADULT crowd of concert goers. The songs from "I'm Wide Awake It's Morning" resonated with this crowd with the same rapport the audience shared with other acts that weekend, including such stalwarts as Arlo Guthrie and Nanci Griffith. They are the kind of company young Conor is peer to. Although this CD came out in 2005, it still gets strong rotation in my stereo.
Average customer rating:
|
Four Winds
Bright Eyes Manufacturer: Saddle Creek ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000MTPAKY Release Date: 2007-03-06 |
Tracks:
- Four Winds
- Reinvent the Wheel
- Smoke Without Fire
- Stray Dog Freedom
- Cartoon Blues
- Tourist Trap
Album Description
With the once revolving line-up of musicians settled on the three constants of Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis and Nate Walcott, Bright Eyes spent much of 2006 in the studio working on their follow-up to the acclaimed simultaneous releases Digital Ash in a Digital Urn and I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning. The first single from these sessions, "Four Winds", is presented here along with 5 exclusive B-sides. Retaining the simmering glow of its predecessors, Four Winds is full of the magic that brought Bright Eyes to international attention. Carefully played, deftly poetic and quietly enchanting, the release has a wandering country charm and all of the story-telling seductiveness of earlier work. The Four Winds single is the precursor to the new Bright Eyes album - Cassadaga - to be released in the US on April 10th. Four Winds and Cassadaga were recorded in various studios in New York City, Los Angeles, Portland, OR and Lincoln, NE. The sessions included a host of guest performers including M.Ward, David Rawlings, Gillian Welch and Janet Weiss of Sleater-Kinney.Customer Reviews:
Great Stuff.......2007-05-17
The use of the steel guitar and mandolins and kinda twangy stuff might turn some people off but I thought it was tastefully done. Think of the Wide awake album and replace the blues influence with country/bluegrass influence.
A great Ep.......2007-03-29
Time to shine on his own.......2007-03-19
By sampling only the tip of what Cassadag awill be, Four winds EP gives us a new respire and new reasons to believe Bright Eyes cannot and will not be tied down to allegories of "the new this" or "the young that" that its lead singer received two years ago.
Opening track Four winds is a more upbeat song if we compared it to anything included in I'm awake it's morning", while 'Smoke without fire". duet with M. Ward takes us back to the times when he was relatively unknown and his ballads sounded like a cry more than a song/ 'Stray dog freedom" explores more the sound of southern rock with louder guitars and a more proper verse-chous-verse structure. Closing track "tourist trap" proves to be the real gem, like in most of his previous EPs.
Although a tease for those of us waiting for the complete album, this EP is worth every penny. Get it, enjoy it, and find out why Bright Eyes music makes the fans rave and passionately love them.
Blown to..........2007-03-17
"Your class, your caste, your country, sect, your name or your tribe/There's people always dying trying to keep them alive," Oberst sings in the title song, tearing through a dour song over a rootsy fiddle and guitar, Mexican girl murals, long shadows, the US's existance, and crumbling society.
It's followed up by the strings and alt-rock of "Reinvent the Wheel," and the quietly folksy "Smoke Without Fire." But then it's off to rock'n'roll-land, with the sizzling slow-burn riffs of "Stray Dog Freedom," distorted country-rock of "Cartoon Blues." And he finally finishes it off with a sort of ghostly folk song, full of harmonica and tapping feet. It sounds like a ghost town's theme song.
Conor Oberst always seems to be diddling around with new sounds -- the last two Bright Eyes albums were basically in two entirely different styles. And "Four Winds" shows us a more uptempo, country-inflected side of the band, without losing the doom'n'gloom sociopolitical lyrics.
The music is pretty straightforward -- lots of acoustic guitar, some strings that can shimmer or twang, and the occasional bit of harmonica. And some rapid-clashing piano in music-hall style. And he diddles around with distortion that twists an otherwise ordinary song into a bizarroworld pop tune, with a "baby" voice echoing his.
Despite the upbeat note of most of the music, Oberst always sounds on the verge of tears. No wonder, since his songs predict America's collapse, mocks those who call him a poser, contemplates drugs and "something changing the world/like a new constitution/a thief I would have to pursue/at all times/at all costs/the truth!"
Bright Eyes has a new album coming out soon, and if this "Four Winds" EP is a representative sampling of what's ahead, it's going to be a good one. Different, but enjoyable.
ONE MAN'S TRASH.......2007-03-12
There are 5 non-album tracks on the single. All of them bloody brilliant. The things Conor throws away would make a Dylan out of Robin Thicke!
"Reinvent The Wheel" is among the finest songs Oberst has ever written. Lines like..."the TV sets will tell us when someone reinvents the wheel / till then I'll have a million conversations about s___ that isn't real' ...cut to the bone atop a bed of bouncy pop guitars, Springstonian harmonicas & Opry strings.
A collaboration with M. Ward on "Smoke Without Fire" is dark and brooding.
I was among the few who preferred "Digital Ash" over "Wide Awake". One reason was the line..."my stray dog freedom / let's have a nice clean cut / like a bag we buy and divvy up". Here he offers up "Stray Dog Freedom" in a whole other context. With a sublime guitar lick that is rooted in mid '70's AM rock, Conors' dog is a Cerberus beast that faintly resembles the smoldering remains of the "American Dream". Again, it's among his best work ever.
As is "Cartoon Blues", proving for the umpteenth time that there is nothing this kid cannot do.
The "Four Winds" disc is beyond a shadow of a doubt the finest CD single I have ever heard.
I can't wait for this album!
Average customer rating:
|
Lorraine Hunt Lieberson: Handel Arias
Manufacturer: Avie ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00022LZW8 Release Date: 2004-08-10 |
Tracks:
- Ah! Whither Should We Fly...
- ...As With Rosy Steps The Morn
- O Bright Example Of All Goodness!...
- ...Bane Of Virtue, Nurse Of Passions
- The Clouds Begin To Veil The Hemisphere...
- ...Defend Her Heav'n!
- Lord, To Thee Each Night And Day
- She's Gone, Disdaining Liberty And Life...
- ...New Scenes Of Joy
- Cantata
- Cantata
- Cantata
- Cantata
- Cantata
- Cantata
- Cantata
- Cantata
- Se Bramate D'amar, Chi Vi Sdegna
- Frondi Tenere E Belle...
- ...Ombra Mai Fu
Amazon.com
If you think you've heard Handel's "Ombra mai fu" (known as his "Largo") so often, and in so many different arrangements, and sung by so many different voices, that you can no longer be moved or surprised by it, think again. This CD of Handel arias, mostly from his Theodora or the cantata La Lucrezia, ends with "Ombra mai fu," and as sung by Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, it is so tender, so beautiful, so impeccably shaded, that you'll think you're hearing it for the first time. But that's only four of this disc's 67 minutes---a follow-up to Hunt Lieberson's extraordinarily successful CD of Bach cantatas. There's not a dull or disinterested moment to be heard anywhere. As the violated Lucrezia, Hunt Lieberson alternately rages against the man who raped her and turns her grief inward; the former is terrifying in its intensity, the latter makes us almost feel as if we're eavesdropping. The five arias for Irene, Theodora's friend, confidante, and the upholder of Christian beliefs are all magical prayers or statements of faith, and from Hunt Lieberson, they become real, with each word honestly conveyed and colored. The voice itself is unfailingly beautiful---warm, lush, never forced, agile when necessary---and her breath control is stunning. She is backed ideally by Harry Bicket and The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, and the string soloists in the ensemble---the viola da gamba player, lutenist, etc.---are as gifted as she is. If you want proof that Handel was a great dramatist with a special gift for communicating emotion, all while listening to sublime sounds, this CD is a must. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
A Legendary Singer........2007-03-07
If we call Ms. Bartoli a 'great' singer, then the description of 'legendary' more aptly depicts Mrs. Lieberson.
If ever a truly good artist lived, Mrs. Lieberson is one such.
The only singer that could be recalled singing in such style is Teresa Berganza; but still, they are different.
This is one of my favourite interpretators of Haendel. Having been 'treated' by those coloraturas of arias of Haendel's period by Ms. Bartoli and others, I find the singing of Lorraine Hunt Lieberson a great relief - at last, this is what Haendel would want it to be. And I equally enjoy the singing of soprano arias by Mrs. Lieberson - the timbre is warmer, but still with all the shimmer - so different from the dark mushy tones of other celebrated 'lyrical soprano' around.
Don't want to say more. Mrs. Lieberson's leaving last year is too heavy a news for me.
Lorraine Hunt Lieberson's Bach: The mind of God revealed!!.......2007-01-06
Glorious singing to treasure for decades.......2006-07-11
Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson (1954-2006), supreme Handelian.......2006-07-06
The Stellar Hunt Lieberson.......2006-03-19
Average customer rating:
|
Lifted or The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground
Bright Eyes Manufacturer: Saddle Creek ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006FRN7 Release Date: 2002-08-13 |
Tracks:
- The Big Picture
- Method Acting
- False Advertising
- You Will. You? Will. You? Will. You? Will
- Lover I Don't Have to Love
- Bowl of Oranges
- Don't Know When But a Day is Gonna Come
- Nothing Gets Crossed Out
- Make War
- Waste of Paint
- From a Balance Beam
- Laura Laurent
- Let's Not Shit Ourselves (to Love and Be Loved)
Amazon.com
Nebraskan wunderkind Conor Oberst writes songs so naked and heartfelt they make you feel like a voyeur just listening to them. This precocious singer-songwriter croons with the astonished intensity of a homeless Robert Smith singing for his supper. And his band's fourth album is every bit as lyrical, sprawling, and pretentious as its title. The production is notably brighter and crisper than previous efforts, with some songs, notably "Nothing Gets Crossed Out," lushly swathed in sweet-sounding strings. When Lifted is great, as on the slow-churning anthem "From a Balance Beam," it's superb, visionary pop music, on par with Jeff Mangum, Phil Elvrum, and Daniel Johnston--and on occasion, Dylan. Unfortunately, half the songs sprawl on too long or revisit the same themes too frequently. Still, anyone who can operate a fast-forward button will find much to enjoy on this vital, messy masterpiece. --Mike McGonigalAlbum Description
Full title - Lifted or The Story is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground. Born in 1980 in Omaha and recording since he was 13, Conor Oberst owns a voice that quakes with the tumultuous energy that only youth can produce. Slipcase. 2002.Customer Reviews:
just wow. .......2007-05-31
Buy this. From start to finish it's endless poetry to music.
Wow.......2007-03-22
Heartfelt is an understatement -- terrific music (even occasional steel guitar) -- lyrics to rival anyone...
I'm Wade Awake still Bright Eyes' best album, but believe me, give this a shot - you won't be disappointed (regardless of your politics).
Anyone with a remote interest in Ryan Adams, Gillian, Wilco, Sufjan needs to give Bright Eyes a try...
Lifted, or the Story Was Daniel Johnston's.......2007-01-03
I have to say though, that the most compelling plotline of Bright Eyes' work here, or through their other albums to this one, is that Oberst has captured a page from the semi-obscure musician, Daniel Johnston. Agree or not, you can hear the resonance of Johnston's work, a decade later in the work of Conor Oberst's early works. I'd have to believe that if Johnston hadn't drown in obscurity and mental illness he'd sound a lot like Bright Eyes today.
"Lifted" is, in my opinion, currently, the definitive work of Bright Eyes. This is a great place to start if you are delving into their catalogue.
SCREW ALL THE BAD REVIEWS.......2006-06-28
Broad scope of Oberst's narrow view.......2006-05-23
Average customer rating:
|
Wynton Marsalis - Baroque Music for Trumpet
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000025XP Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Trumpet Concerto In D Major - 1. Allegro
- Trumpet Concerto In D Major - 2. Largo
- Trumpet Concerto In D Major - 3. Allegro (moderato)
- 'Let the Bright Seraphim' From Samson
- Sonata A 5 For Trumpet & Strings, T.V. 3
- 'Sound the Trumpet' from Come Ye Sons Of Art
- 'Chaconne' from Come Ye Sons Of Art
- 'Entrada' from The Indian Queen
- 'Trumpet Air' from The Indian Queen
- 'Trumpet Tune' from King Arthur
- 'Trumpet Overture' from The Indian Queen
- Sonata A 5 For Trumpet & Strings, T.V. 7
- 'Eternal Source Of Light Divine'
- For Solo Trumpet And Strings, Concert No. 2 - 1. Allegro
- 2. Adagio
- For Solo Trumpet And Strings, Concert No. 2 - 3. Allegro
Customer Reviews:
A blast of brass.......2005-08-18
Old school Wynton.......2005-08-12
fabulous.......2003-09-28
Amazing talent.......2001-04-22
Average customer rating:
|
John Rutter Collection
Rutter , Cambridge Singers , and London Sinfonia Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006LIEZ Release Date: 2002-11-12 |
Tracks:
- For The Beauty Of The Earth
- The Lord Is My Shepherd
- All Things Bright And Beautiful
- Shepherd's Pipe Carol
- The Lord Bless You And Keep You
- Open Thou Mine Eyes
- My True Love Hath My Heart (From Birthday Madrigals)
- Esurientes (From Magnificat)
- Gloria Patri (From Magnificat)
- Out Of The Deep (From Requiem)
- Pie Jesu (From Requiem)
- What Sweeter Music
- A Choral Fanfare
- A Prayer Of St. Patrick
- O Be Joyful In The Lord
- Behold, The Tabernacle Of God
- O Praise The Lord Of Heaven
- A Gaelic Blessing
- Angel's Carol
- Matthew, Mark, Luke And John (From Five Childhood Lyrics)
- Sing A Song Of Sixpence (From Five Childhood Lyrics)
- Go Forth Into The World In Peace
Customer Reviews:
John Rutter Collection.......2007-02-19
Typically gorgeous Rutter.......2005-12-20
Wonderful!.......2005-12-03
To sample Rutter's best music, this is the one........2005-06-30
The Best.......2005-04-29
Sidney Vaught
Average customer rating:
|
Bright Size Life
Pat Metheny Manufacturer: Ecm Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000261L9 Release Date: 2000-02-29 |
Tracks:
- Bright Size Life
- Sirabhorn
- Unity Village
- Missouri Uncompromised
- Midwestern Nights Dream
- Unquity Road
- Omaha Celebration
- Round Trip / Broadway Blues
Amazon.com essential recording
Larger ensembles may have provided Pat Metheny with his most visible successes, but he's repeatedly fired up his most fluid and personal playing in leaner trio settings, starting with this, his 1976 debut as a leader. Bob Moses brings both delicacy and effortless dynamics to his drumming, but it's the late Jaco Pastorius's lyrical electric bass that clinches the guitarist's coming-out party: with Metheny already displaying the liquid tone and exquisite touch that define his sound, old friend Pastorius radiates a sympathetic lyricism and unerring sense of swing. Metheny would match, but not transcend, this level of interplay in justly celebrated troikas with Charlie Haden and Billy Higgins (on Rejoicing) and Dave Holland and Roy Haynes (on Question and Answer). --Sam Sutherland.Customer Reviews:
A watershed recording.......2007-03-16
A Classic.......2007-03-14
This is the One To Have.......2007-02-15
Breathtaking ..........2006-09-19
What a brilliant album this is! It's quiet, intropective, and delightingly beautiful. Metheny has all the emotions at his fingertips, and brings them to the audience in a quiet and honest way. I especcially like the quieter tracks, like "Unity Village" and "Midwestern Night Dream". This is just plain beautiful stuff, honestly. Everyone can like this cd, may it be on occasion, late at night with a good drink (very recommendable), or just all day long (for jazz freaks only). Very highly reccomended. Everyone should've heard this once in a lifetime.
Jazz Trio 101.......2006-07-08
For the reviewer that rated this a `1', you seriously have some music history to learn. Practice your own instrument more and you'll understand what genius is represented here.
Average customer rating:
|
The Mozart Effect: Music for Newborns - A Bright Beginning
Manufacturer: Children's Group ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004YR74 Release Date: 2000-10-03 |
Tracks:
- Rondo in C, K.617 - Vienna Volksoper Ens/Peter Maag
- Sinf in D, 'The Peasant's Wedding': V. Finale: Molto Allegro - Karl-Heinz Schickhaus
- Vars On 'Ah Vous Dirai-je Maman', K.265 - Janos Sebestyen
- Lodron Night Music, K.247: IX. Allegro Assai - Capella Istropolitana/Wolfgang Sobotka
- Ser No.10 in B, K.361 'Gran Partita': Theme With Vars - German Wind Soloists
- Ser No.10 in B, K.361 'Gran Partita': Romance And Adagio - German Wind Soloists
- Ser No.3 in D, K.185: II. Andante - Salzburg CO/Harald Nerat
- Ser No.3 in D, K.185: V. Andante Grazioso - Salzburg CO/Harald Nerat
- Ser No.4 in D, K.203: II. Andante - Salzburg CO/Harald Nerat
- Divert in D, K.205: III. Adagio - Capella Istropolitana/Richard Edlinger
Customer Reviews:
Great first step to Mozart .......2006-11-08
I'm a fan of slow songs in latter half.......2006-03-25
Music Album:
- Bud's a Little Wiser
- Can't Settle for Less [Import]
- Catching Up With the Superstars of Country
- Country's Greatest Hits, Vol. 8: Lonely Hearts
- Country Music Legend
- Daniel in Blue Jeans [Import]
- Deep in the Heart of Texas
- Desperate Man
- Did I Shave My Legs for This? [CD-single]
- Don't Just Stand There [Import]
