Native Sons

native sons

Track Listings

1. Dance With Somebody
2. Only a Fool
3. So Far Away
4. Where Do We Go from Here?
5. Goodnight L. A.
6. Empty Streets
7. Stand Up and Shout
8. Shake the Seven
9. Never Gonna Lose It
10. Face to Face

Native Sons,Strangeways,Hangdog Records Ltd,Hard Rock,Heavy Metal,Pop,Rock,Rock/Pop
Native Sons
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Not there best, but.......
  • With All Due Respect...
  • the weakest link
  • By far the BEST Loggins and Messina album ever!
  • This album is great?
Native Sons
Loggins & Messina
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  1. Full Sail
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  4. Sittin' In
  5. On Stage

ASIN: B00000254S
Release Date: 1990-05-29

Tracks:

  1. Sweet Marie
  2. Pretty Princess
  3. My Lady, My Love
  4. When I Was A Child
  5. Waisting Our Time
  6. Peacemaker
  7. It's Alright
  8. Boogie Man
  9. Fox Fire
  10. Native Son

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Not there best, but..............2006-09-24

I have most if not all of Loggins and Messina's work. Together, I feel they did their best work. This album was not a chart topper but has some of the best stuff they ever did. Pretty Princess puts chills up my spine everytime I hear the horns in it. I have had this record for years and am finally upgrading to a CD. If you don't have this album and are a fan, you should buy it. You will be very happy you did.

5 out of 5 stars With All Due Respect..........2006-07-31

With all due respect to the other reviewers of this CD, "Native Sons" is my favorite Loggins & Messina album. Maybe it's because this was the first L&M album I bought. Prior to getting this album, I was only familiar with Loggins & Messina through their top 40 hits (which I liked well enough). But after hearing this album, I realized there was a lot more to these guys. I quickly gathered their entire discography.

Granted there were no hit singles from "Native Sons", but I much prefer an album of consistent quality to one with a few hits surrounded by filler. And I like the quality of this album. Play "It's Alright" and see if the message Jim Messina is saying is still true today. "Politician's reasoning is downright confusing - and now their rationing gas..." It slides right into "Boogie Man", a fine boogie-woogie number. "When I Was a Child" is a touching ballad about loss of a parent. "Sweet Marie" is a great song with a funky bass saxophone line. "My Lady, My Love" is a waltz that evokes the feel of the late 1800's depicted on the album cover and liner notes (faithfully reproduced on the CD from the original album art and inner sleeve). "Native Son" is a Kenny Loggins song that is in a vein similar to the title cut on his future first solo album, "Celebrate Me Home". "Fox Fire" and "Wasting Out Time" also work quite well for me. And I have particular affection for "Peacemaker" from this album which Kenny Loggins also used as the opening song during his first solo concert tour after the "Celebrate Me Home" album came out (which I was fortunate enough to see).

As a big follower of horn bands (BS&T, Lighthouse, et al.), I always take note of the brass/reed section on an album. In this band on saxophone/reeds you have Jon Clarke and Vince Denham, both veterans of the Don Ellis Orchestra (Jon on "Live at Fillmore" and "Tears of Joy"; Vince on "Connection" and "Soaring"). That alone should tell you these dudes can play. One particular solo by (I believe) Jon comes in the Jim Messina piece, "Pretty Princess" which is about an extra-marital affair. The solo could be described as a musically graphic portrayal of a portion of that story (wink-wink, nod-nod, say-no-more.) This expressive solo knocks me out every time I listen to it. Recently (while watching the Loggins & Messina DVD "Live at the Hollywood Bowl") I was saddened to find out that Jon Clarke passed away in 2005 at a rather early age of 54. Peace, Jon.

While other Loggins & Messina fans may have their favorite albums, "Native Sons" remains mine. Listen. Enjoy.

1 out of 5 stars the weakest link.......2006-03-22

as a longtime fan of loggins and messina i have to admit that this record is the weakest of the lot. by the time this album came out, i am sure loggins and messina were working on diferent agenda's. this is a tired album, no life and probably fulfilled their committment to columbia records. i would prefer to think of the energy of loggins and messina on the first two albums of theirs. don't get me wrong, their are some decent tracks on this album but nothing that rocks like vahevela or country song.

5 out of 5 stars By far the BEST Loggins and Messina album ever!.......2005-06-26

This is by far the best work by Loggins and Messina. Several great songs (It's Alright, Pretty Princess, Fox Fire, Peacemaker) are both melodic and soulful. This is a definite "must by" by the duo. I rate it an A+

5 out of 5 stars This album is great?.......2005-06-10

The question marks is because I'm wondering why others think so little of it?

Is it their best album, no, is it their worst... no way.

Is Mother Lode their best... likely, and this one comes in a close second (for me any ways) (Full Sail is up there as well, mostly Mother Lode stuff, but a fine alblum none the less.)

I might have to confess... I'm a real big fan of Loggins & Messina, and have all of their album's as a group as well as solo stuff.

I think they are much better then most folks got to hear. I'm not a big fan of "Your mama don't dance (except "Outside- from the Redwoods version" and feel folks need to listen to more of their music. Once they do, they too will be big fans, of this and the other albums they recorded.

In any case, Native Son is much more then a 2 1/2 star rating, buy it, listen to it, enjoy it.
Native Sons
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • It's a Great Record! Don't Order it!
  • MUSIC TO SLAM DANCE AND CHEW SNUFF TO
  • +1/2 -- The best EP and album never recorded by Gram Parsons
  • Gets you back to the source
  • One Of The Great Lost LPs Of The '80s
Native Sons
The Long Ryders
Manufacturer: Frontier Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Jangle PopJangle Pop | Indie & Lo-Fi | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
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ASIN: B000003SSX
Release Date: 1993-09-06

Tracks:

  1. Final Wild Son
  2. Still Get By
  3. Ivory Tower
  4. Run Dusty Run
  5. (Sweet) Mental Revenge
  6. Fair Game
  7. Tell It To The Judge On Sunday
  8. Wreck Of The 809
  9. Too Close To The Light
  10. Never Got To Meet The Mom
  11. I Had A Dream

Amazon.com

Los Angeles's Long Ryders were unabashed in revering their musical ancestors. The front cover of the country-rock quartet's debut album aped the planned photo for Buffalo Springfield's unreleased Stampede, and the group dressed in the same sort of sheepskin jackets and Nudie vests as Neil Young and Gram Parsons wore back in their heydays. They even asked ex-Byrd Gene Clark to sing with them. (Lead Ryder Sid Griffin would take his love of rock history even further by writing the first book on the life of the late country-rock pioneer Parsons. He's now a widely published music writer.) Given all that, it's easy to write the Long Ryders off as just another in a series of early- to mid-'80s West Coast groups going through a momentary "paisley revival." But the group's first two releases--an EP called 10-5-60 and their debut long-player, Native Sons--show that this was a band that could often take borrowed influences to new and exciting places, fusing punk energy and southern-rock populism with the secondhand West Coast milieu. "Tell It to the Judge on Sunday" and "Never Got to Meet the Mom," in particular, were songs strong and vibrant enough to brighten up any Springfield album. --Don Harrison

Album Description

Native Sons was the first full-length album by the Long Ryders and the one that established their eclectic mixture of Byrds/Clash/Flying Burrito Brothers' influences. 1984 release. Frontier.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars It's a Great Record! Don't Order it!.......2006-04-10

I'm awfully fond of Native Sons. It was the first full length from the Long Ryders, who were among the best of the rockers of the first era of "quote" bands ... bands that name-and-sound checked great music of their (our) youths in the 60's and 70's and made going to hear bar bands a kick again (like Dream Syndicate, True Believers, Rain Parade, the Fleshtones, and dozens of others). I liked this one so much, with its Byrds 12-string quotes, Gene Clark backing vocals, and general pal-y attitude, I bought it on CD. And Amazon sent me Native Sons, without 10-5-60 (the earlier Long Ryders EP that was supposed to be included on the CD I ordered). I sent it back to them and asked them to send me another, the correct CD this time. And they sent me Native Sons alone, without 10-5-60 on it, AGAIN. I gave up at that point. But they screwed up my order for this one TWICE. So be forewarned; there's more than one version of this CD around and Amazon's employees can't get it right.

4 out of 5 stars MUSIC TO SLAM DANCE AND CHEW SNUFF TO.......2005-09-29

This CD compiles the first two Long Ryders albums 10-5-60 (which happens to be the date Elvis Presley joined the army), and Native Sons that were released in the early 80's. Much has been said about The Long Ryders being an early alt-country band, but these two albums have overall a more psychedelic garage rock sound to them. Granted, country influences are obvious in songs such as Sweet Mental Revenge (a Mel Tillis cover), and Born To Believe In You, but the overall sound is more like The Byrds playing Clash covers. One would be hard pressed to find anything Grand Ol Opry sounding on tunes like And She Rides or Too Close To The Light. Standout tracks are the blistering I Had A Dream, and the sublime Ivory Tower (Gene Clark from the Byrds guests on backup vocals).

The recordings, like all albums from this time period, have that God-Awfull 80's lets-put-gated-reverb-on-everything sound to them, however, the songs themselves are well written and thought out to make one forget such annoyance. If you dig other bands from this era such as The Replacements, I couldn't see anyone being dissatisfied with THe Ryders.

4 out of 5 stars +1/2 -- The best EP and album never recorded by Gram Parsons.......2005-02-20

As part of the so-called Los Angeles paisley underground of the early '80s, The Long Ryders were hardly secretive about their influences. While the Bangles, Three O'Clock and Rain Parade were following more pop and psychedelic footsteps, the Long Ryders were pressing down the road charted by Gram Parsons, The Byrd, The Buffalo Springfield and others. The original issue of this CD combined their debut EP "10-5-60" and their first album, "Native Sons," along with a bonus recording of "The Trip." Current pressings of the CD, unfortunately, omit the EP and bonus track.

The EP laid out the band's brand of cosmic American music that included straight ahead rock 'n' roll, but with healthy doses of country, folk and power-pop. They were just as comfortable with drum-stomping guitar-riff driven rockers like "10-5-60" as they were with old-timey autoharp and pedal steel of "Born to Believe in You." The EP's highlight is the closer, "And She Rides," which neatly combines rock, country and hints of psychedelia all in one.

The follow-up LP hit many of the same high-points as the debut, but didn't maintain the consistency across all 11 tracks. Highlights include the bluesy country rock of "Final Wild Son" and the Chuck Berry meets the Beach Boys "Run Dusty Run." "Still Get By" shows the band to be consummate craftsmen of pop hooks, and throughout the rest of the album Sid Griffin and Stephen McCarthy break out pedal steel, banjo, mandolin and more. Ex-Byrd Gene Clark even drops in for vocals on "Ivory Tower."

The Long Ryders would continue to record some fine discs, but nothing as cohesive and satisfying as this pair. The straight-up "Native Sons" reissue is very good, but it's the debut EP that makes it worthwhile to look for the original CD reissue.

5 out of 5 stars Gets you back to the source.......2004-01-02

I own this on vinyl; the music stands up to repeated listenings and drives a useful phenomena. Take a listen to Track 5, Sweet Mental Revenge, and compare it to the other tracks. It is definitely different, in the bizzare lyrics (You'll walk the floor from door to door And pull out your peroxide hair) and highly charged guitars. You might recall that the Flying Burrito Brothers recorded this song, and kept it in the folk/rock repotoire-but something this nutty had to come from Nashville.

Mel Tillis, best known for his speech patterns, wrote and recorded this song in the 1960's. Took me about a year to find the original recording in the pre-internet days, but one can hear how Tillis made this song legendary, and the Long Ryders kept it alive. Excellent pedigree on this song with a salute to the Long Ryders for pulling it out of obscurity.

5 out of 5 stars One Of The Great Lost LPs Of The '80s.......2003-09-03

For anyone who thought the '80s were hair bands and synthesizers, here's the rebuke. I bought this "album" on the strength of the psychedelic freakout that is "I Had A Dream". Upon further listening, I found an album that opened up my ears to the real promise of what country music could deliver. Yes, this is the beginnings of No Depression/Americana/Alt-Country. The Long Ryders, along with Jason and the Scorchers opened up the roads for acts like Wilco, Son Volt, Whiskeytown, Ol 97's and even Steve Earle, to trod down. AAMOF, this album is how you get from Gram Parsons/Sweetheart of the Rodeo-era Byrds to those aforementioned bands. If you need proof, check out "Ivory Tower". Personal faves are the aforementioned "I Had A Dream", "Ivory Tower", Never Got To Meet The Mom" and the stunning "Too Close To The Light". Definitely worth a listen. Eighteen years later and it still holds a special place in my collection.
Native Sons
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Native Sons
    Loggins & Messina
    Manufacturer: Columbia/Legacy
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Pop | Styles | Music
    Soft RockSoft Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    Folk RockFolk Rock | Rock | Styles | Music
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    2. On Stage
    3. Loggins & Messina
    4. Full Sail
    5. Borboletta

    ASIN: B000F9UDSA
    Release Date: 2006-07-03

    Tracks:

    1. Sweet Marie
    2. Pretty Princess
    3. My Lady, My Love
    4. When I Was a Child
    5. Wasting Our Time
    6. Peacemaker
    7. It's Alright
    8. Boogie Man
    9. Fox Fire
    10. Native Son

    Album Description

    Exclusive Japanese limited edition digitally remastered reissue of this 1976 album, packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. 10 tracks. CBS. 2006.

    Album Details

    Japanese Limited Edition Issue of the Album Classic in a Deluxe, Miniaturized LP Sleeve Replica of the Original Vinyl Album Artwork.
    Native Sons
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Near-perfect AOR album
    Native Sons
    Strangeways
    Manufacturer: Majestic Rock
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    3. Diving for Pearls
    4. Humanity-Hour 1
    5. Street Talk

    ASIN: B000E6EO4S
    Release Date: 2006-03-27

    Tracks:

    1. Dance with Somebody
    2. Only a Fool
    3. So Far Away
    4. Where Do We Go from Here
    5. Goodnight L.A.
    6. Empty Streets
    7. Stand Up and Shout
    8. Shake the Seven
    9. Never Gonna Lose It
    10. Face to Face
    11. Stand Up and Shout [Live][*]
    12. Breakin' Down the Barriers [Live][*]
    13. Dance with Somebody [Live][*]
    14. Never Gonna Lose It [Live][*]

    Album Description

    The second album from the Glasgow based AOR act STRANGEWAYS is rightly regarded, as the finest British release the genre has thus far seen and may even be the best that has ever come out of Europe! Terry Brock had made a very successful career out of singing backing vocals on some of the biggest albums of the period, including for Journey & Foreigner. This was his and the band's day in the sunshine. 'Native Sons' is little short of a masterpiece! Released here in a remastered form with expanded art work, sleeve notes from Classic Rock magazine's Dave Ling and with two previously unreleased bonus tracks, this is the best this album has ever looked or sounded. Majestic Rock. 2006

    Album Details

    The Second Album from the Glasgow Based Aor Act Strangeways is Rightly Regarded, as the Finest British Release the Genre Has Thus Far Seen and May Even Be the Best that Has Ever Come Out of Europe! Terry Brock Had Made a Very Successful Career Out of Singing Backing Vocals on Some of the Biggest Albums of the Period, Including for Journey and Foreigner. This was his and the Band's Day in the Sunshine. 'native Sons' is Little Short of a Masterpiece! Released Here in a Remastered Form with Expanded Art Work, Sleeve Notes from Classic Rock Magazine's Dave Ling and with Two Previously Unreleased Bonus Tracks, this is the Best this Album Has Ever Looked Or Sounded.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Near-perfect AOR album.......2006-12-20

    What a difference the right singer makes. Strangeways' 1986 debut album was decent enough, but the band struck gold when they replaced outgoing vocalist Tony Liddell with Terry Brock, who sang for the Steve Morse and provided background vocals to the biggest AOR acts like Journey and Foreigner.

    Brock's debut with Strangeways was 1987's Native Sons. His vocal style is like Steve Perry's with a bit of a David Glen Eisley "rock" edge, and is absolutely perfect for the kind of Journey/Foreigner/Toto/Giuffria/FM AOR that the Scotland-based band serves up. Native Sons draws the best elements from all of the era's best AOR/arena rock bands, and while it may not be all that original, it is still a fantastic album that can hold its own against any of that era's better known AOR albums. Native Sons is full of great guitar work, lots of keyboards, solid songwriting, and above all Terry Brock's powerful vocal performance.

    If you're a fan of that larger than life 80's AOR/arena rock sound, Native Sons is all but guaranteed to put a big smile on your face. And if you were a Strangeways fan back in the day, you should love the reissued version of Native Sons.

    NOTE: Majestic Rock (fast becoming my new favorite reissue label) reissued Native Sons in 2006. The album features much-needed digital remastering and four live bonus tracks - Stand Up and Shout, Breakin' Down the Barriers, Dance With Somebody, Never Gonna Lose It. For some reason, Amazon only lists two bonus tracks, and the wrong ones at that.
    Native Sons
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • It's a Great Record! Don't Order it!
    • MUSIC TO SLAM DANCE AND CHEW SNUFF TO
    • +1/2 -- The best EP and album never recorded by Gram Parsons
    • Gets you back to the source
    • One Of The Great Lost LPs Of The '80s
    Native Sons
    The Long Ryders
    Manufacturer: Frontier
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    Jangle PopJangle Pop | Indie & Lo-Fi | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    Roots RockRoots Rock | Rock | Styles | Music
    Similar Items:
    1. Gas Food Lodging / Green on Red [2 Lps on One CD]
    2. The Best of the Long Ryders
    3. Best of the Del Fuegos: Slash Years
    4. Gravity Talks
    5. Sixteen Tambourines/Baroque Hoedown

    ASIN: B00000DTZH
    Release Date: 2002-08-27

    Tracks:

    1. Final Wild Son
    2. Still Get By
    3. Ivory Tower
    4. Run Dusty Run
    5. (Sweet) Mental Revenge
    6. Fair Game
    7. Tell It To The Judge On Sunday
    8. Wreck Of The 809
    9. Too Close To The Light
    10. Never Got To Meet The Mom
    11. I Had A Dream
    12. Join My Gang
    13. You Don't Know What's Right, You Don't Know What's Wrong
    14. 10-5-60
    15. Born To Believe In You
    16. The Trip
    17. And She Rides

    Amazon.com

    Los Angeles's Long Ryders were unabashed in revering their musical ancestors. The front cover of the country-rock quartet's debut album aped the planned photo for Buffalo Springfield's unreleased Stampede, and the group dressed in the same sort of sheepskin jackets and Nudie vests as Neil Young and Gram Parsons wore back in their heydays. They even asked ex-Byrd Gene Clark to sing with them. (Lead Ryder Sid Griffin would take his love of rock history even further by writing the first book on the life of the late country-rock pioneer Parsons. He's now a widely published music writer.) Given all that, it's easy to write the Long Ryders off as just another in a series of early- to mid-'80s West Coast groups going through a momentary "paisley revival." But the group's first two releases--an EP called 10-5-60 and their debut long-player, Native Sons--show that this was a band that could often take borrowed influences to new and exciting places, fusing punk energy and southern-rock populism with the secondhand West Coast milieu. "Tell It to the Judge on Sunday" and "Never Got to Meet the Mom," in particular, were songs strong and vibrant enough to brighten up any Springfield album. --Don Harrison

    Album Description

    Native Sons was the first full-length album by the Long Ryders and the one that established their eclectic mixture of Byrds/Clash/Flying Burrito Brothers' influences. 1984 release. Frontier.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars It's a Great Record! Don't Order it!.......2006-04-10

    I'm awfully fond of Native Sons. It was the first full length from the Long Ryders, who were among the best of the rockers of the first era of "quote" bands ... bands that name-and-sound checked great music of their (our) youths in the 60's and 70's and made going to hear bar bands a kick again (like Dream Syndicate, True Believers, Rain Parade, the Fleshtones, and dozens of others). I liked this one so much, with its Byrds 12-string quotes, Gene Clark backing vocals, and general pal-y attitude, I bought it on CD. And Amazon sent me Native Sons, without 10-5-60 (the earlier Long Ryders EP that was supposed to be included on the CD I ordered). I sent it back to them and asked them to send me another, the correct CD this time. And they sent me Native Sons alone, without 10-5-60 on it, AGAIN. I gave up at that point. But they screwed up my order for this one TWICE. So be forewarned; there's more than one version of this CD around and Amazon's employees can't get it right.

    4 out of 5 stars MUSIC TO SLAM DANCE AND CHEW SNUFF TO.......2005-09-29

    This CD compiles the first two Long Ryders albums 10-5-60 (which happens to be the date Elvis Presley joined the army), and Native Sons that were released in the early 80's. Much has been said about The Long Ryders being an early alt-country band, but these two albums have overall a more psychedelic garage rock sound to them. Granted, country influences are obvious in songs such as Sweet Mental Revenge (a Mel Tillis cover), and Born To Believe In You, but the overall sound is more like The Byrds playing Clash covers. One would be hard pressed to find anything Grand Ol Opry sounding on tunes like And She Rides or Too Close To The Light. Standout tracks are the blistering I Had A Dream, and the sublime Ivory Tower (Gene Clark from the Byrds guests on backup vocals).

    The recordings, like all albums from this time period, have that God-Awfull 80's lets-put-gated-reverb-on-everything sound to them, however, the songs themselves are well written and thought out to make one forget such annoyance. If you dig other bands from this era such as The Replacements, I couldn't see anyone being dissatisfied with THe Ryders.

    4 out of 5 stars +1/2 -- The best EP and album never recorded by Gram Parsons.......2005-02-20

    As part of the so-called Los Angeles paisley underground of the early '80s, The Long Ryders were hardly secretive about their influences. While the Bangles, Three O'Clock and Rain Parade were following more pop and psychedelic footsteps, the Long Ryders were pressing down the road charted by Gram Parsons, The Byrd, The Buffalo Springfield and others. The original issue of this CD combined their debut EP "10-5-60" and their first album, "Native Sons," along with a bonus recording of "The Trip." Current pressings of the CD, unfortunately, omit the EP and bonus track.

    The EP laid out the band's brand of cosmic American music that included straight ahead rock 'n' roll, but with healthy doses of country, folk and power-pop. They were just as comfortable with drum-stomping guitar-riff driven rockers like "10-5-60" as they were with old-timey autoharp and pedal steel of "Born to Believe in You." The EP's highlight is the closer, "And She Rides," which neatly combines rock, country and hints of psychedelia all in one.

    The follow-up LP hit many of the same high-points as the debut, but didn't maintain the consistency across all 11 tracks. Highlights include the bluesy country rock of "Final Wild Son" and the Chuck Berry meets the Beach Boys "Run Dusty Run." "Still Get By" shows the band to be consummate craftsmen of pop hooks, and throughout the rest of the album Sid Griffin and Stephen McCarthy break out pedal steel, banjo, mandolin and more. Ex-Byrd Gene Clark even drops in for vocals on "Ivory Tower."

    The Long Ryders would continue to record some fine discs, but nothing as cohesive and satisfying as this pair. The straight-up "Native Sons" reissue is very good, but it's the debut EP that makes it worthwhile to look for the original CD reissue.

    5 out of 5 stars Gets you back to the source.......2004-01-02

    I own this on vinyl; the music stands up to repeated listenings and drives a useful phenomena. Take a listen to Track 5, Sweet Mental Revenge, and compare it to the other tracks. It is definitely different, in the bizzare lyrics (You'll walk the floor from door to door And pull out your peroxide hair) and highly charged guitars. You might recall that the Flying Burrito Brothers recorded this song, and kept it in the folk/rock repotoire-but something this nutty had to come from Nashville.

    Mel Tillis, best known for his speech patterns, wrote and recorded this song in the 1960's. Took me about a year to find the original recording in the pre-internet days, but one can hear how Tillis made this song legendary, and the Long Ryders kept it alive. Excellent pedigree on this song with a salute to the Long Ryders for pulling it out of obscurity.

    5 out of 5 stars One Of The Great Lost LPs Of The '80s.......2003-09-03

    For anyone who thought the '80s were hair bands and synthesizers, here's the rebuke. I bought this "album" on the strength of the psychedelic freakout that is "I Had A Dream". Upon further listening, I found an album that opened up my ears to the real promise of what country music could deliver. Yes, this is the beginnings of No Depression/Americana/Alt-Country. The Long Ryders, along with Jason and the Scorchers opened up the roads for acts like Wilco, Son Volt, Whiskeytown, Ol 97's and even Steve Earle, to trod down. AAMOF, this album is how you get from Gram Parsons/Sweetheart of the Rodeo-era Byrds to those aforementioned bands. If you need proof, check out "Ivory Tower". Personal faves are the aforementioned "I Had A Dream", "Ivory Tower", Never Got To Meet The Mom" and the stunning "Too Close To The Light". Definitely worth a listen. Eighteen years later and it still holds a special place in my collection.
    Sweet Seraphic Fire
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Fantastic!!!!!!
    Sweet Seraphic Fire

    Manufacturer: New World Records
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    1. Early American Choral Music, Vol. 2
    2. Early American Choral Music, Vol. 1
    3. The Norumbega Harmony: Historic and Contemporary Hymn Tunes and Anthems from the New England Singing School Tradition (American Made Music Series)

    ASIN: B000AA4L8W
    Release Date: 2005-08-02

    Tracks:

    1. New Canaan (Oliver Holden, 1793)
    2. Maryland (William Billings, 1778)
    3. Bethlehem (William Billings, 1778)
    4. Lynn (Oliver Holden, 1793)
    5. Funeral Hymn (Oliver Holden, 1792)
    6. An Anthem for Easter (William Billings, 1787/1795)
    7. Walpole (Abraham Wood, 1786)
    8. Beauty (Jacob French, 1789)
    9. Happiness (Jacob French, 1793)
    10. Woburn (Jacob Kimball, 1793)
    11. Montague (Timothy Swan, 1801)
    12. Newport (Daniel Read, 1785)
    13. Hatfield (Thomas Baird, 1800)
    14. Attention (Asahel Benham [?], 1790)
    15. Crucifixion (M. Kyes, 1798)
    16. Mechias (James Lyon, 1774)
    17. St. Paul's (Supply Belcher, 1794)
    18. Transition (Supply Belcher, 1794)
    19. Jubilant (Supply Belcher, 1794)
    20. The Lilly (Supply Belcher, 1794)
    21. Buckfield (Abraham Maxim, 1802)
    22. Pennsylvania (Nehemiah Shumway, 1793)
    23. Sounding Joy (J. P. Storm, 1795 )
    24. Redemption (Jeremiah Ingalls, 1805)
    25. Consolation (Lucius Chapin, c. 1812)
    26. Liberty-Hall (Lucius Chapin, 1813)
    27. Babe of Bethlehem (Southern Harmony, 1835)
    28. Convoy (M. L. Swan, 1867)
    29. Hallelujah New (Roland Hutchinson, 1996)
    30. Nativity (Bruce Randall, 1990)
    31. Cortona (M. R. Truelsen, 1996)
    32. Great Divide (Stephen Marini, 1998)
    33. Arinello (Dennis O'Brien, 1997)
    34. Ev'ry String Awake (Glen Wright, 1996)
    35. Ten Thousand Charms (Hal Kunkel, 1996)

    Product Description

    Sweet Seraphic Fire brings together two unique bodies of American sacred song: choral compositions from the New England singing-school tradition and the most popular Evangelical Protestant hymn texts in historic American use. In the late eighteenth century the New England singing-school movement produced America's first great sacred-music style, employing several genres of unaccompanied four-part choral compositions with the melody in the lead (tenor) part. The enormous popularity of singing-school music also promoted a canon of hymn texts shared across America's competing Evangelical Protestant denominations. This recording contains neglected masterworks from the New England singing school that also helped to create the American hymn canon. Marking a more recent turn in this process, we have also included some new settings of traditional Evangelical lyrics written by leaders in the revival of singing-school music that has blossomed in the Northeast since 1976. ! Selection of pieces for this recording was determined by correlating "The Norumbega Harmony"--our collection of one hundred six historic New England singing-school compositions and thirty contemporary works in traditional style--with a list of the three hundred most frequently printed hymn texts in America from 1737 to 1960. --Stephen Marini

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Fantastic!!!!!!.......2006-03-15

    This is a REALLY cool album of shape-note singings, I particurlarly like EVERY STRING AWAKE and ANTHEM FOR EASTER.
    Some of the songs are kind of dreary, (Hatfield) but all in all this is COOL!!!
    Native Sons
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • It's a Great Record! Don't Order it!
    • MUSIC TO SLAM DANCE AND CHEW SNUFF TO
    • +1/2 -- The best EP and album never recorded by Gram Parsons
    • Gets you back to the source
    • One Of The Great Lost LPs Of The '80s
    Native Sons
    The Long Ryders
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
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    Similar Items:
    1. Gas Food Lodging / Green on Red [2 Lps on One CD]
    2. The Best of the Long Ryders
    3. Best of the Del Fuegos: Slash Years
    4. Gravity Talks
    5. Sixteen Tambourines/Baroque Hoedown

    ASIN: B000024M4U

    Tracks:

    1. Final Wild Son
    2. Still Get By
    3. Ivory Tower
    4. Run Dusty Run
    5. (Sweet) Mental Revenge
    6. Fair Game
    7. Tell It to the Judge on Sunday
    8. Wreck of the 809
    9. Too Close to the Light
    10. Never Got to Meet the Mom
    11. I Had a Dream

    Amazon.com

    Los Angeles's Long Ryders were unabashed in revering their musical ancestors. The front cover of the country-rock quartet's debut album aped the planned photo for Buffalo Springfield's unreleased Stampede, and the group dressed in the same sort of sheepskin jackets and Nudie vests as Neil Young and Gram Parsons wore back in their heydays. They even asked ex-Byrd Gene Clark to sing with them. (Lead Ryder Sid Griffin would take his love of rock history even further by writing the first book on the life of the late country-rock pioneer Parsons. He's now a widely published music writer.) Given all that, it's easy to write the Long Ryders off as just another in a series of early- to mid-'80s West Coast groups going through a momentary "paisley revival." But the group's first two releases--an EP called 10-5-60 and their debut long-player, Native Sons--show that this was a band that could often take borrowed influences to new and exciting places, fusing punk energy and southern-rock populism with the secondhand West Coast milieu. "Tell It to the Judge on Sunday" and "Never Got to Meet the Mom," in particular, were songs strong and vibrant enough to brighten up any Springfield album. --Don Harrison

    Album Description

    Native Sons was the first full-length album by the Long Ryders and the one that established their eclectic mixture of Byrds/Clash/Flying Burrito Brothers' influences. 1984 release. Frontier.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars It's a Great Record! Don't Order it!.......2006-04-10

    I'm awfully fond of Native Sons. It was the first full length from the Long Ryders, who were among the best of the rockers of the first era of "quote" bands ... bands that name-and-sound checked great music of their (our) youths in the 60's and 70's and made going to hear bar bands a kick again (like Dream Syndicate, True Believers, Rain Parade, the Fleshtones, and dozens of others). I liked this one so much, with its Byrds 12-string quotes, Gene Clark backing vocals, and general pal-y attitude, I bought it on CD. And Amazon sent me Native Sons, without 10-5-60 (the earlier Long Ryders EP that was supposed to be included on the CD I ordered). I sent it back to them and asked them to send me another, the correct CD this time. And they sent me Native Sons alone, without 10-5-60 on it, AGAIN. I gave up at that point. But they screwed up my order for this one TWICE. So be forewarned; there's more than one version of this CD around and Amazon's employees can't get it right.

    4 out of 5 stars MUSIC TO SLAM DANCE AND CHEW SNUFF TO.......2005-09-29

    This CD compiles the first two Long Ryders albums 10-5-60 (which happens to be the date Elvis Presley joined the army), and Native Sons that were released in the early 80's. Much has been said about The Long Ryders being an early alt-country band, but these two albums have overall a more psychedelic garage rock sound to them. Granted, country influences are obvious in songs such as Sweet Mental Revenge (a Mel Tillis cover), and Born To Believe In You, but the overall sound is more like The Byrds playing Clash covers. One would be hard pressed to find anything Grand Ol Opry sounding on tunes like And She Rides or Too Close To The Light. Standout tracks are the blistering I Had A Dream, and the sublime Ivory Tower (Gene Clark from the Byrds guests on backup vocals).

    The recordings, like all albums from this time period, have that God-Awfull 80's lets-put-gated-reverb-on-everything sound to them, however, the songs themselves are well written and thought out to make one forget such annoyance. If you dig other bands from this era such as The Replacements, I couldn't see anyone being dissatisfied with THe Ryders.

    4 out of 5 stars +1/2 -- The best EP and album never recorded by Gram Parsons.......2005-02-20

    As part of the so-called Los Angeles paisley underground of the early '80s, The Long Ryders were hardly secretive about their influences. While the Bangles, Three O'Clock and Rain Parade were following more pop and psychedelic footsteps, the Long Ryders were pressing down the road charted by Gram Parsons, The Byrd, The Buffalo Springfield and others. The original issue of this CD combined their debut EP "10-5-60" and their first album, "Native Sons," along with a bonus recording of "The Trip." Current pressings of the CD, unfortunately, omit the EP and bonus track.

    The EP laid out the band's brand of cosmic American music that included straight ahead rock 'n' roll, but with healthy doses of country, folk and power-pop. They were just as comfortable with drum-stomping guitar-riff driven rockers like "10-5-60" as they were with old-timey autoharp and pedal steel of "Born to Believe in You." The EP's highlight is the closer, "And She Rides," which neatly combines rock, country and hints of psychedelia all in one.

    The follow-up LP hit many of the same high-points as the debut, but didn't maintain the consistency across all 11 tracks. Highlights include the bluesy country rock of "Final Wild Son" and the Chuck Berry meets the Beach Boys "Run Dusty Run." "Still Get By" shows the band to be consummate craftsmen of pop hooks, and throughout the rest of the album Sid Griffin and Stephen McCarthy break out pedal steel, banjo, mandolin and more. Ex-Byrd Gene Clark even drops in for vocals on "Ivory Tower."

    The Long Ryders would continue to record some fine discs, but nothing as cohesive and satisfying as this pair. The straight-up "Native Sons" reissue is very good, but it's the debut EP that makes it worthwhile to look for the original CD reissue.

    5 out of 5 stars Gets you back to the source.......2004-01-02

    I own this on vinyl; the music stands up to repeated listenings and drives a useful phenomena. Take a listen to Track 5, Sweet Mental Revenge, and compare it to the other tracks. It is definitely different, in the bizzare lyrics (You'll walk the floor from door to door And pull out your peroxide hair) and highly charged guitars. You might recall that the Flying Burrito Brothers recorded this song, and kept it in the folk/rock repotoire-but something this nutty had to come from Nashville.

    Mel Tillis, best known for his speech patterns, wrote and recorded this song in the 1960's. Took me about a year to find the original recording in the pre-internet days, but one can hear how Tillis made this song legendary, and the Long Ryders kept it alive. Excellent pedigree on this song with a salute to the Long Ryders for pulling it out of obscurity.

    5 out of 5 stars One Of The Great Lost LPs Of The '80s.......2003-09-03

    For anyone who thought the '80s were hair bands and synthesizers, here's the rebuke. I bought this "album" on the strength of the psychedelic freakout that is "I Had A Dream". Upon further listening, I found an album that opened up my ears to the real promise of what country music could deliver. Yes, this is the beginnings of No Depression/Americana/Alt-Country. The Long Ryders, along with Jason and the Scorchers opened up the roads for acts like Wilco, Son Volt, Whiskeytown, Ol 97's and even Steve Earle, to trod down. AAMOF, this album is how you get from Gram Parsons/Sweetheart of the Rodeo-era Byrds to those aforementioned bands. If you need proof, check out "Ivory Tower". Personal faves are the aforementioned "I Had A Dream", "Ivory Tower", Never Got To Meet The Mom" and the stunning "Too Close To The Light". Definitely worth a listen. Eighteen years later and it still holds a special place in my collection.
    Native Sons
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Fantastic AOR album
    Native Sons
    Strangeways
    Manufacturer: Bmg Music
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    Hard RockHard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B00000E6CF
    Release Date: 1989-02-06

    Tracks:

    1. Dance With Somebody
    2. Only a Fool
    3. So Far Away
    4. Where Do We Go from Here?
    5. Goodnight L. A.
    6. Empty Streets
    7. Stand Up and Shout
    8. Shake the Seven
    9. Never Gonna Lose It
    10. Face to Face

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Fantastic AOR album.......2006-12-20

    What a difference the right singer makes. Strangeways' 1986 debut album was decent enough, but the band struck gold when they replaced outgoing vocalist Tony Liddell with Terry Brock, who sang for the Steve Morse and provided background vocals to the biggest AOR acts like Journey and Foreigner.

    Brock's debut with Strangeways was 1987's Native Sons. His vocal style is like Steve Perry's with a bit of a David Glen Eisley "rock" edge, and is absolutely perfect for the kind of Journey/Foreigner/Toto/Giuffria/FM AOR that the Scotland-based band serves up. Native Sons draws the best elements from all of the era's best AOR/arena rock bands, and while it may not be all that original, it is still a fantastic album that can hold its own against any of that era's better known AOR albums. Native Sons is full of great guitar work, lots of keyboards, solid songwriting, and above all Terry Brock's powerful vocal performance.

    If you're a fan of that larger than life 80's AOR/arena rock sound, Native Sons is all but guaranteed to put a big smile on your face.

    NOTE: Majestic Rock recently reissued Native Sons with digitally remastered sound and four live bonus tracks. If you're going to pick up a copy of Native Sons, I'd recommend that version above all others.
    Aksel Schiøtz Sings Nielsen
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Aksel Schiøtz Sings Nielsen

      Manufacturer: Pearl
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      All Works by NielsenAll Works by Nielsen | Nielsen, Carl | ( N ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
      Incidental MusicIncidental Music | Theatrical, Incidental & Program Music | Forms & Genres | Classical | Styles | Music
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      ASIN: B000000WP8
      Release Date: 1994-11-29

      Tracks:

      1. Underlige aftenlufte
      2. Skjaldens sang - into - Jeg baere med smil
      3. Sang bag ploven, Op.10 - 4
      4. Vi sletterne sonner
      5. Jaegersang
      6. I aften
      7. Sommersang, Op.10 - 3
      8. Gron er barens hoek - intro. - Farvel, min
      9. Magdelones dansescene
      10. Den danske sang
      11. Havets sang
      12. 'Moderen' Op.41: Skjaldens vise
      13. Den milde dag, Op.42
      14. Hymne til Danmark
      15. Jens Vehmand, Op.21-3
      16. Farinello: Sangen har vinger
      17. Farinelli: Den som har
      18. Farinelli: Der er en sang
      19. Farinelli: Livets glaeder
      20. Lille Konval
      21. Jeg ved ej
      22. Dengang jeg var
      23. Der var en svend
      Native Sons
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Native Sons

        ProductGroup: Music
        Binding: Audio CD
        ASIN: B0003AC8F2

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        6. Originals [Box set] [Import]
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