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Dust Bowl Ballads -- Remastered CD

Woody Guthrie

1940/2000 RCA/Buddha Records

Amazon.com essential recording

"If you'll gather 'round me children, a story I will tell," sings Woody Guthrie in "Pretty Boy Floyd." Children of all ages have never stopped gathering 'round Woody Guthrie since he recorded these songs in the spring of 1940, and that most-famous line tells us a lot about his approach: his songs are for all people, simple and direct enough to be understood by young ones, irresistibly catchy, yet devilishly clever and cutting. His ability to boil down complex emotions and issues to their very core has rarely been matched. "So long it's been good to know yuh," he sings in "Dusty Old Dust," and its childlike sing-along quality only serves to reinforce his very serious points. Across these 14 songs, Guthrie recounts and relives his experience as an Okie forced from his home by the Depression and drought of the 1930s, chronicling the arduous journey in brilliant, sometimes hilarious, sometimes horrifying detail. The characters that inhabit his stories are sincere, sympathetic, and brutally alive. Originally released in 1940 on two albums, and again in 1964 for the benefit of salivating folk revivalists, Dust Bowl Ballads returns once again in 2000 freshly remastered, full of new photos and boasting one alternate take. If there is one album of modern American folk music that deserves to be reissued for the benefit of each generation, it is this collection. In terms of the singer-songwriter concept, it is truly the river's source; in historical terms, it's to the New Deal what the Declaration of Independence is to the American Revolution. --Marc Greilsamer

Amazon.com

Few records hit this hard. Guthrie's theme is the Great Depression's devastation, as visited on the land and people of America's heartland. Guthrie raises the talking blues form to a new level of realism and poetry, and he charges some of his strongest story songs ("Tom Joad" and "Pretty Boy Floyd") with a vividness songwriters like Springsteen and Dylan have chased ever since. Need to decide on one Guthrie album? This is it. --Roy Francis Kasten

1. The Great Dust Storm (Dust Storm Disaster) 26622 - A
2. I Ain't Got No Home In This World Anymore 26624 - A
3. Talkin' Dust Bowl Blues 26619 - A
4. Vigilante Man 26624 - B
5. Dust Can't Kill Me 26620 - B
6. Pretty Boy Floyd LPV 502
7. Dust Pneumonia Blues 26623 - B
8. Blowin' Down This Road 26619 - B
9. Tom Joad - Part 1 26621 - A
10. Tom Joad - Part 2 26621 - B
11. Dust Bowl Refugee 26623 - A
12. Do Re Mi 26620 - A
13. Dust Bowl Blues LPV 502
14. Dusty Old Dust 26622 - B
15. Talkin' Dust Bowl Blues (alternate take) Buddha records CD reissue only
 
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Pete Seeger's Greatest Hits -- Remastered CD

Pete Seeger

2002 Columbia Records

Amazon.com

Pete Seeger's recording career covers more than 60 years, so a single-CD collection is bound to leave out more than a few worthy songs. But the 16 selections on Pete Seeger's Greatest Hits include indispensable Seeger-composed classics like "Turn! Turn! Turn!," "Bells of Rhymney," and an abbreviated a cappella version of "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" Also included are songs Seeger popularized, such as "Wimoweh," which he learned from Solomon Linda's original South African recording in the 1940s, and "Guantanamera," which he picked up from some children at a Catskills summer camp where he was singing. All of the performances are drawn from his 1960s tenure at Columbia Records--only the first 12 tracks were included on the original 1967 package--and include both studio and live recordings. This CD features only a small fraction of the songs that could legitimately be called Seeger's greatest hits, but because most of these selections are so important to his career, this set can be thought of as the greatest of his greatest hits. --Michael Simmons

Track Listing
1. Little Boxes
2. Wimoweh (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)
3. Where Have All The Flowers Gone
4. Abi Yoyo
5. Bells Of Rhymney
6. Turn Turn Turn
7. Talking Union
8. Which Side Are You On
9. We Shall Overcome
10. Living In The Country
11. Darling Corey
12. Guantanamera
13. Waist Deep In The Big Muddy (Bonus Track)
14. Barbara Allen (Bonus Track)
15. This Land Is Your Land (Bonus Track)
16. Michael Row The Boat Ashore (Bonus Track)
 
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The Very Best of Judy Collins -- Remastered CD

Judy Collins

1971/2001 Elektra/Rhino Records

Indispensible Judy, December 23, 2001
By "pspa" (Boston, MA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Very Best of (Audio CD)

Judy Collins never really got credit for being one of the great folk singers of the 60s, perhaps because of her transformation later in life into an art/torch singer, perhaps because she largely did not write her own material. But this CD shows her range and versatility as a folk singer, featuring of course her immortal covers of Joni Mitchell's Both Sides Now and Stephen Sondheim's Send In The Clowns, but also showcasing a variety of beautiful and moving renditions of less familiar songs. Since You Asked and My Father particularly come to mind. If you already own Colors of the Day, her 1972 greatest hits album, the major addition here is Send in the Clowns; if you are looking for just one CD, this one is definitely better because of a more expansive selection.

Track Listing
1. Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)
2. So Early, Early in the Spring
3. Suzanne
4. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
5. Both Sides Now
6. Since You've Asked
7. Albatross
8. My Feather
9. Someday Soon
10. Who Knows Where the Time Goes?
11. Chelsea Morning - (single version)
12. Farwell to Tarwathie
13. Song for Judith (Open the Door)
14. Cook With Honey
15. Send in the Clowns
16. Amazing Grace
 
We lost John too soon. I sure miss him and wonder what he'd be doin' today!

RIP John and thanks, your music has touch my soul for as long as I can remember! :text-bravo:

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John Denver's Greatest Hits -- Remastered CD

John Denver

1973/2005 RCA Victor Records

More than just a compliation..., November 25, 2006
By ewomack "ewomack" (MN USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE)
This review is from: John Denver's Greatest Hits (Audio CD)

Long after his untimely death in 1997, John Denver's songs continue to flicker through America's collective unconscious. Everyone, even the hip hop generation, can sing "Take me Home, Country Roads" and "Rocky Mountain High." Time has actually treated the oft-maligned Denver, born Henry John Deutschendorf, Jr., rather well. Stripped of the 1970s music culture that derided him as sappy, corny, hokey, shallow, and the essence of uncool, his songs can finally speak for themselves. The era of "art" and "glam" rock had no patience for a "high on life" grinning ear-to-ear songwriter who, to them, resembled the Marlboro Man's disowned hippy son. He got it from all sides. After climbing up the rock/pop charts, Denver soon began to score on the country charts. He became a crossover phenomenon, which meant, in his case, that neither the rock/pop nor the country music communities accepted him. Like usurped royalty they watched as his albums sold millions.

No album of Denver's outsold "John Denver's Greatest Hits." According to the RIAA, it has sold over nine million copies in the United States and still occupies a spot on their top 100 all-time best selling albums list. But its title remains a slight misnomer. At the time of its release in 1973 only four of the album's eleven songs really qualified as "hits." The others had appeared on his then neglected first three albums, released between 1969 and 1970. Those nonstarters nearly ended his career with a splat. Then, a miracle. The final album of his four album contract, 1971's "Poems, Prayers, and Promises," included the now archetypal "Take Me Home, Country Roads." In a flash Denver became ubiquitous. Another gargantuan hit followed in 1972, "Rocky Mountain High," that solidfied the Cheshire Cat nature boy as a major celebrity. The fuse was lit. "Sunshine On My Shoulder" soared to number one in 1974, outdoing both "Country Roads" and "Rocky Mountain High," following the release of this "Greatest Hits" compilation. Self-fulfilling prophecy, indeed. The remaining qualifying "hit", "Leaving On a Jet Plane," wasn't even a John Denver hit. Though he wrote the song, it was Peter, Paul and Mary that launched it up the charts in 1967. He recorded it for his first solo album, 1969's "Rhymes & Reasons," but the album went nowhere. Paradoxically, regardless of the fact that this "Greatest Hits" album only contains a few actual "hits," the album nonetheless remains Denver's biggest hit album.

Not only that, Denver actually re-recorded many of the older songs specifically for this collection. As he says in the apologetic liner notes: "I felt that some of these songs had grown a bit, that I am singing better than I was four or five years ago, and that I would like to treat some of the songs a little differently than I had in the original recordings." This very unorthodox, and unprecedented, approach to a greatest hits collecton gives the album a very consistent sound. Instead of a creating a collage of styles and production values, Denver essentially constructed an entirely new album. This allowed the once neglected songs to take on a new life. He made them sound like hits.

The songs on this album capture the sound and feel of their era. Just listen. A mere nanosecond of "Country Roads" has enough potency to evoke now whispy images of dark paneled walls with moving waterfall beer signs, oversaturated technicolor landscapes, three-channel television playing documentaries on Sasquatch and Nessie, ubiquitous ashtrays, wide aisled department store dreams, and analog living standards. "Rocky Mountain High" contains enough Americana one can almost imagine Woody Guthrie singing it. Almost. The 1970s would not have sounded the same without John Denver, which, though some may have preferred, detractors cannot deny.

John Denver remains one of the most adored and satirized singer songwriters in recent memory. He had the "honor" of being strangled on a Monty Python Record (resulting in a defamation lawsuit that he won), as well as being honored with numerous awards and tributes following his accidental death. He even embraced conservation long before it went mainstream. "Greatest Hits" captures his career on the early upswing, but not quite at its peak. He continued to dominate the radio and television airwaves throughout the 1970s. "Greatest Hits Volume II" continues the story.

Side A

"Take Me Home, Country Roads" (Bill Danoff, Taffy Nivert, John Denver) - 3:08
"Follow Me" (John Denver) - 2:56 ****
"Starwood in Aspen" (John Denver) - 3:10 ****
"For Baby (For Bobbie)" (John Denver) - 2:58
"Rhymes and Reasons" (John Denver) - 3:11 ****
"Leaving on a Jet Plane" (John Denver) - 4:00 ****

Side B

"The Eagle and the Hawk" (John Denver, Mike Taylor) - 2:10 ****
"Sunshine on My Shoulders" (John Denver, Dick Kniss, Mike Taylor) - 5:10 *
"Goodbye Again" (John Denver) - 3:36
"Poems, Prayers and Promises" (John Denver) - 4:34 ****
"Rocky Mountain High" (John Denver, Mike Taylor) - 4:43

**** New versions recorded especially for this project; generally, compilations today prefer the original versions*** The version of Sunshine On My Shoulders included here is the single version, featuring overdubbed strings.
 
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John Denver's Greatest Hits Volume 2 -- Not Remastered CD :angry-tappingfoot:

John Denver

1977/1983 RCA Victor Records

Excellent, June 7, 2000
By "bobbybutton" (Hollywood, California USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: John Denver: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 (Audio CD)

These are the ORIGINAL RECORDINGS of John Denver hits. John Denver was a great talent as reflected on this CD and his songs appreciated even more now that we have lost him. This CD and "John Denver's Greatest Hits" Volume One constitute the two CD's necessary for any library. Buy this CD; It's excellent!

Side one

"Annie's Song"1 2:58
"Farewell Andromeda (Welcome To My Morning)"2 3:15
"Fly Away"3 4:08
"Like A Sad Song"4 4:04
"Looking For Space"3 3:56
"Thank God I’m A Country Boy"5 3:13

Side two

"Grandma’s Feather Bed"7 2:07
"Back Home Again"1 4:42
"I’m Sorry"3 3:29
"My Sweet Lady"6 4:47
"Calypso"3 3:32
"This Old Guitar"7 2:59

1 from Back Home Again
2 recording unique to album; original recording from Farewell Andromeda
3 from Windsong
4 from Spirit
5 recording from An Evening with John Denver; originally appeared on Back Home Again
6 recording unique to album; original recording from Poems, Prayers, and Promises
7 recording unique to album; original recording from Back Home Again


18253
 
No, I'm not proud, but it is music I grew up with.... :text-lol:

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Back To Basics - The Essential Collection 1971-1992 -- CD

Olivia (Newton-John)

1992 Geffen Records

Great One Disc Compilation of ONJ's work and Surprisingly Great Sound!, December 20, 2005
By Frederick Baptist (Singapore) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)


This review is from: Back to Basics: The Essential Collection 1971-1992 (Audio CD)
I have to say that for an unremastered album, the sound quality of this cd is remarkably good! I can only imagine how much better this would be if they would remaster it and make this a 20 track collection as I agree with most of the other reviewers here that some truly essential tracks are missing. That, I suppose, is inevitable given the volume of ONJ's work and the ability to only put so many tracks on one disc. Which is why I'm more forgiving of this version of her best of tracks and I'm going to say that the tracks here are a very good selection by themselves and there are 4 new tracks as well. ONJ has been very lucky in that she has had great songwriters write for here like John Farrar and great producers as well like David Foster enhancing her sound. There really isn't a weak track here and my favourites that are real gems of songwriting and performance are "Magic" (the great guitar harmonics still gives me goosebumps everytime), "A Little More Love" (one of the best bass lines ever composed) "Sam" (a great love song and written by one of the original members of the Shadows!)"Have You Never Been Mellow" and "I Honestly Love You" This is a very good ONJ compilation and for the price, 17 great track selections and surprisingly good sound quality a great bargain indeed. Highly recommended.

"Deeper Than a River"
"Not Gonna Be the One"
"I Want to Be Wanted"
"I Need Love"
"Twist of Fate"
"Physical"
"Magic"
"Deeper Than the Night"
"A Little More Love"
"You're the One That I Want"
"Summer Nights"
"Hopelessly Devoted to You"
"Please Mr. Please"
"Sam"
"Have You Never Been Mellow"
"If You Love Me (Let Me Know)"
"I Honestly Love You"
 
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Wreck Of The Day -- CD

Anna Nalick

2005 Columbia Records

Far from a wreck, July 21, 2005
By Amanda Richards (Georgetown, Guyana) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Wreck of the Day (Audio CD)

The latest in a line of moody, deep female vocalists, California native Anna Nalick claims the influences of Fiona Apple, Tori Amos, The Cranberries, Blind Melon, John Mayer and Stevie Ray Vaughn. Pretty heady stuff for a 21 year old, who got her big break by knowing the right people at the right time, and having a demo tape handy.

In my opinion, she sounds like a mixture of Alanis Morissette and Sara McLaughlin, with the youthful buzz of Avril Lavigne in ballad mode.

Slower and more introspective than current pop offerings, her eleven song debut album sounds like something from a much more seasoned performer, not unlike fellow youngsters Joss Stone and LeAnn Rimes.

Nalick wrote all the songs on the album, blending haunting melodies a la Ms. McLaughlin with spiritually uplifting lyrics. The best songs on the album are "Breathe (2 AM)" where she sounds very similar to Alanis Morissette; "Citadel" a song that would fit in on any Sara McLaughlin album; "Paper Bag" which as you might guess sounds like an Avril Lavigne ballad; "Satellite" my personal pick; and the very Cranberries track "In My Head"; but they're all pretty good.

A young talent with a bright future.

Amanda Richards, July 21, 2005

All tracks written by Anna Nalick.

"Breathe (2 AM)" – 4:39
"Citadel" – 2:46
"Paper Bag" – 3:27
"Wreck of the Day" – 4:05
"Satellite" – 3:57
"Forever Love (Digame)" – 3:19
"In The Rough" – 4:02
"In My Head" – 4:04
"Bleed" – 3:57
"Catalyst" – 3:34
"Consider This" – 3:34

NOTE: This album was re-issued in 2006 with three additional tracks and new (better!) cover art....

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Blurring The Edges -- CD

Meredith Brooks

1997 Capitol Records

Refreshingly Honest Rock
, February 11, 2005
By G. E. Williams "Nunah" (California) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Blurring the Edges (Audio CD)

This is the first Meredith brooks album, she doesn't even admit to "see it through my eyes" (which was recorded earlier but released later against her wishes) on her website. This great album is reminiscent of early Heart, guitar based rock, thoughtfully honest lyrics, and if not a flawless voice, certainly one that is not hard to listen to. This album contains the most lusty song ever, "What would happen if we Kiss", made more impactful with disonnant sound in the background to set the feeling, "Mouth to mouth, lust to lust, spontainiously combust", Yow!. Very imaginative.

I Need (Brooks, Peiken) – 4:10
Bitch (Brooks, Peiken) – 4:12
Somedays (Brooks, Dvoskin) – 3:45
Watched You Fall (Brooks, Ward) – 4:50
Pollyanne (Brooks, Peiken) – 3:14
Shatter (Brooks, Peiken) – 3:59
My Little Town (Brooks, Corey, Lynch) – 3:59
What Would Happen (Brooks) – 5:16
It Don't Get Better (Brooks, Dukes) – 4:12
Birthday (Brooks, Peiken) – 3:14
Stop (Brooks, Dvoskin) – 5:00
Wash My Hands (Brooks, Dvoskin, Peiken) – 5:04
 
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Down To Earth -- CD

Jem

2008 ATO Records

Sparkles, September 26, 2008

By Amanda Richards (Georgetown, Guyana) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Down to Earth (Audio CD)

There's no other word for it - Jem sparkles in this long awaited follow up to her 2004 debut album Finally Woken.

Her music will be familiar to fans of popular shows such as Grey's Anatomy, The OC, 24, Six Feet Under, Gossip Girl and others, as well as the movies Eragon and $ex and the City, as it seems that music by this talented Welsh singer/songwriter is just about everywhere you turn.

This album is an interesting mix of musical genres - funk, latin, and pop, among others. On one track she sings with South African singer/songwriter Vusi Mahlasela, and in others she sings in Japanese and Spanish.

The singles so far are the brilliant "So Amazing" (from the movie $ex and the City); the retro-funky "Crazy" (from Gossip Girl) and "I Always Knew" (from 90210)

Watch for possible singles in the Latin beat track "I Want You to.." (think Shakira); the inspirational "Keep On Walking"; the peppy dance track "Aciiid!" (think Britney when she's on form) and the mellow "And So I Pray" and "On Top of the World".

All the tracks are co-written by Jem (Jemma Griffiths), and every track is a winner. Highly recommended for just about everybody.

Amanda Richards, September 27, 2008

1. "Down to Earth" Jem Griffiths, Jeff Bass, Justin Griffiths 4:34
2. "Crazy" Jem Griffiths, Jeff Bass 3:39
3. "I Want You To..." Jem Griffiths, Lester Mendez, Lucas MacFadden 3:39
4. "It's Amazing" Lester Mendez, Jem Griffiths 3:58
5. "Keep On Walking" Jem Griffiths, Jeff Bass 4:12
6. "You Will Make It (featuring Vusi Mahlasela)" Jem Griffiths, Justin Griffiths 6:12
7. "I Always Knew" Lester Mendez, Jem Griffiths 3:10
8. "Got It Good" Jem Griffiths, Jeff Bass 4:27
9. "Aciiid!" Greg Kurstin, Jem Griffiths 2:57
10. "How Would You Like It" Jem Griffiths, Justin Griffiths 4:02
11. "And So I Pray" Jem Griffiths, Kevin Beber 2:42
12. "On Top of the World" Lester Mendez, Jem Griffiths 4:52
 
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On How Life Is CD

Macy Gray

1999 Epic Records

That voice!, February 28, 2000
By Caz (Pittsburgh, PA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: On How Life Is (Audio CD)

I had heard "Do Something" on MTV when this CD first came out... I enjoyed it, but wasn't bowled over. I'm usually not a big fan of R&B, soul music. A couple friends of mine played this CD in their car constantly at the end of last summer. I ended up purchasing the disc because I couldn't get "I Try" out of my head. This disc may not hit you immediately, but let me assure you IT WILL GROW ON YOU and you will love it! It's my favorite disc of 1999. I purchased it back in August and continue listening to it today. For a guy with a 700+ cd collection that says a lot. Most cd's find their way onto a shelf and rarely come back down. I saw Macy in concert here in Pittsburgh recently. She is an incredible talent and deserves much success. I consider my self an 'adult alternative' fan with tastes that range from Everything but the Girl to Dead Can Dance to Pet Shop Boys... love a real voice (Sarah, Sting), love drama (Erasure, Depeche Mode)... hate polish (Whitney, Mariah)... love Macy Gray. Check her out. You won't be disappointed!

1. "Why Didn't You Call Me" Macy Gray, Jeremy Ruzumna 3:14
2. "Do Something" Gray, Darryl Swann, Ruzumna, Dion Murdock, Patrick Brown, Raymon Murray, Rico Wade, Cameron Gipp, Robert Barnett, André Benjamin, Antwan Patton, Thomas Burton, Greg Mays, Daryl Barnes, George Clinton, Jr., Garry Shider, Bernard Worrell 5:00
3. "Caligula" Gray, Swann, Ruzumna 4:38
4. "I Try" Gray, Ruzumna, Jinsoo Lim, David Wilder 3:59
5. "Sex-o-Matic Venus Freak" Gray, Ruzumna, Murdock 3:57
6. "I Can't Wait to Meetchu" Gray, Swann, Ruzumna, Miles Tackett 5:18
7. "Still" Gray, Ruzumna, Bill Esses, Jeff Blue 4:15
8. "I've Committed Murder" Gray, Swann, Ruzumna, Kiilu Beckwith, Eddie Harris, Francis Lai, Carl Sigman 5:00
9. "A Moment to Myself" Gray, Ruzumna, Tackett, Mark Morales, Damon Wimbley 4:00
10. "The Letter" Gray, Jamie Houston, Matt Sherrod 5:38
 
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Knuckle Down -- CD

Ani DiFranco

2005 Rightous Babe Records

Amazon.com

Even after 15 years of releasing albums on her own Righteous Babe imprint, it's hard to know what to make of Ani DiFranco. Some see her as a folkie-punk-bisexual-feminist-radical-crap-kicker, while others reckon she's merely Alanis Morissette with better lyrics. On her 15th studio album the truth just might be somewhere in between. She does dysfunctional family portraits ("Studying Stones") and broken affairs ("Lag Time") just fine, but she also manages to leave room for rambling, autobiographical beat poetry ("Parameters"). And then there is the music. Matching acoustic guitars with earthy funk rhythms and soft moonlight moods with out-of-leftfield song arrangements, it reconfirms the one label everyone can agree upon: fiercely original. --Aidin Vaziri

"Knuckle Down" – 4:34
"Studying Stones" – 3:53
"Manhole" – 3:45
"Sunday Morning" – 4:49
"Modulation" – 4:31
"Seeing Eye Dog" – 4:02
"Lag Time" – 5:13
"Parameters" – 5:58
"Callous" – 5:46
"Paradigm" – 4:33
"Minerva" – 4:55
"Recoil" – 5:08
 
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Car Wheels On A Gravel Road -- CD

Lucinda Williams

1998 Mercury Records

Amazon.com essential recording

Lucinda Williams makes this whole music thing seem so simple: Write in plain language about the people and places that crowd your memory; add subtle flavors of a mandolin here, a Dobro there, perhaps an accordion or slide guitar; above all, sing as honestly and naturally as you can. Of course, it took her six years to achieve this simplicity, an amazing achievement considering the number of knobs that were turned. Her exquisite voice moans and groans and slips and slides--she delivers a polished tone in a coarse manner. On the superb "Concrete and Barbed Wire," soft acoustic guitars are punctuated by electric slide, accordion, mandolin, and Steve Earle's harmony. Williams's deeply personal stories are matched with bluesy rumbles, raunchy grooves, and plaintive whispers. The entire Deep South is reduced to a sleepy small town filled with ex-lovers, dive bars, and endless gravel roads. --Marc Greilsamer

All tracks by Lucinda Williams except where noted.

"Right in Time" – 4:35
"Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" – 4:44
"2 Kool 2 Be 4-gotten" – 4:42
"Drunken Angel" – 3:20
"Concrete and Barbed Wire" – 3:08
"Lake Charles" – 5:27
"Can’t Let Go" (Randy Weeks) – 3:28
"I Lost It" – 3:31
"Metal Firecracker" – 3:30
"Greenville" – 3:23
Emmylou Harris on harmony vocals
"Still I Long For Your Kiss" (Williams, Duane Jarvis) – 4:09
"Joy" – 4:01
"Jackson" – 3:42
 
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A couple folks here recommended this one, I'm finally getting down to watching it.
Absolutely fascinating. Bela spent some time getting familiar with African scales/chords before going to Africa, and for the most part fits right in. Right now though he's playing a group with a female thumb pianist, who are playing across a I-IV-V chord pattern... :think: Wonder if they've picked that up from radio/satellite radio...? I'll have more to write later...
 
My last one for the evening...

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Chester & Lester -- CD

Chet Atkins & Les Paul

1976 & 2007 RCA Nashville Legacy

Chester & Lester is a collaborative album by guitarists Chet Atkins and Les Paul released in 1976.

It was recorded in the mid-1970s when Chet was in his fifties and Les in his sixties. Chet coaxed Les out of his decade-long retirement for this recording. The liner notes state there is very little overdubbing and the majority of the album was live in the studio.

Chester & Lester peaked at No. 11 on Billboard's Country album chart and No. 172 on the Pop album chart. It peaked at No. 27 on the Country chart again in 1978. At the Grammy Awards of 1976, Chester & Lester won the Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance.


Side one

"It's Been a Long, Long Time" (Sammy Cahn, Jule Styne) – 3:33
"Medley: Moonglow/Picnic" – 4:44
"Caravan" (Duke Ellington, Irving Mills, Juan Tizol) – 3:21
"It Had to Be You" (Isham Jones, Gus Kahn) – 3:34
"Out of Nowhere" (Johnny Green, Edward Heyman) – 3:14

Side two

"Avalon" (Buddy DeSylva, Al Jolson, Vincent Rose) – 6:32
"The Birth of the Blues" (Lew Brown, Buddy G. DeSylva, Ray Henderson) – 3:07
"Someday, Sweetheart" (Spikes, Spikes) – 3:21
"'Deed I Do" (Walter Hirsch, Fred Rose) – 2:31
"Lover, Come Back to Me" (Oscar Hammerstein, Sigmund Romberg) – 2:44

Bonus tracks on Columbia Nashville CD re-release:

"The World is Waiting for the Sunrise" (previously unreleased, Bonus Tracks)
"You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me" (previously unreleased, Bonus Tracks)
"Caravan" (previously unreleased, alternate take, Bonus Tracks)
"Moonglow / Picnic (Theme From 'Picnic')" (previously unreleased, Bonus Tracks/Rehearsal Version)
 
:music-rockout: :music-rockout: :music-rockout:
 

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Spirit -- CD

Jewel

1998 Atlantic Records

Amazon.com

It's time for an update of our image of Jewel, the ingenue who set the music world on fire with her 1995 debut album, Pieces of You. After all, that effort consisted primarily of songs Jewel had written several years before, some of them dating back to her days as a free- spirited waif living in a van on the beach in San Diego. Now, at 25, she's become a sort of guru for self-expression and full disclosure, revealing perhaps too much of herself in see-through dresses worn to awards shows and a critically drubbed (yet bestselling) book of poetry. Spirit makes plain why Jewel's well-intentioned yet sometimes facile lyrics strike a chord with her audience while her poetry lies flat on the page. On songs like "Deep Water," "Hands," and "Down So Long," her words are borne aloft by sparkling melodies and her soaring voice, making even the most cynical observer take a schoolgirl-notebook image such as "your heart like grape gum on the ground" or an unreassuring platitude like "If I could tell the world just one thing / It would be that we're all OK" somewhat in stride. On Pieces of You, Jewel posed the musical question "Who will save your soul?" On Spirit, it sounds like she wants to do it herself. And the truth is, if you don't overanalyze it, the album does act as a sort of balm for wounded psyches or maybe a primer for raising your own inner child. Maybe she's right and we are all OK. Who knew? --Daniel Durchholz

"Deep Water" (Kilcher) – 4:16
"What's Simple Is True" (Kilcher) – 3:34
"Hands" (Kilcher, Patrick Leonard) – 3:54
"Kiss the Flame" (Kilcher) – 3:17
"Down So Long" (Kilcher) – 4:13
"Innocence Maintained" (Kilcher) – 4:08
"Jupiter" (Kilcher) – 4:18
"Fat Boy" (Kilcher) – 2:54
"Enter from the East" (Kilcher) – 4:02
"Barcelona" (Kilcher) – 3:53
"Life Uncommon" (Kilcher) – 4:56
"Do You" (Kilcher) – 4:21
"Absence of Fear" (Kilcher) – 7:25
"This Little Bird" (hidden track) (John D. Loudermilk)
 
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Burning The Daze -- CD

Marc Cohn

1998 Atlantic Records

Amazon.com

Sidelined by a divorce and single fatherhood, Marc Cohn returns to active duty rejuvenated, if recognizably scarred, since the marginal disappointment of his sophomore outing. Burning the Daze strikes closer to the high mark set by his '91 debut, his sultry vocals and well-crafted songs attesting to the set's careful gestation. Guitarist John Leventhal, a not-quite-secret weapon on the prior albums, is officially aboard as coproducer, an apt choice given his contributions to other recent singer-songwriters' studio work, bringing his versatility and musicianship to bear on a solid new clutch of Cohn originals. "Already Home" opens the set with a sleek midtempo groove, Memphis-cured horn riffs, and allusions to Homer and the Wizard of Oz, "Saints Preserve Us" successfully cops from the Band, and "Lost You In The Canyon" transforms a cell phone into an effective metaphor for more primal communication problems. --Sam Surtherland

All songs written by Marc Cohn, except "Already Home" written by Marc Cohn and John Leventhal; "Turn to Me" written by Marc Cohn and Kevin Salem; and "Turn on Your Radio" written by Harry Nilsson.

"Already Home" – 4:42
"Girl of Mysterious Sorrow" – 4:17
"Providence" – 3:56
"Healing Hands" – 4:29
"Lost You in the Canyon" – 4:16
"Saints Preserve Us" – 4:10
"Olana" – 4:22
"Turn to Me" – 3:28
"Valley of the Kings" – 3:40
"Turn On Your Radio" – 3:57
"Ellis Island" – 5:12
 
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Back In The High Life -- CD

Steve Winwood

1986 Island Records

Smash album deserves its Grammys and its worldwide success, May 21, 2000
By Don Nunn (Seattle, WA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Back in the High Life (Audio CD)

This was the album that cemented my admiration for Steve Winwood. It was the album that introducted me to Winwood's solo work, as "Higher Love" and "Back In The High Life Again" each hit the Top Ten in the U.S.

The tracks fit well together, and each track is a work of art by itself. This album was a worldwide smash and cemented Winwood's position among the great solo artists, and is among my favorite albums by any artist. Winwood received a total of three Grammys for this album, each well-deserved.

If you decide to sample just one of Winwood's solo albums, this is the one to try. It's definitely a mainstream work, unlike Winwood's earlier solo albums, which were more showcases of Winwood's engineering talent. Those albums are great too, but this one best defines his solo career, the mix of talent and hard work that makes him a success.

All songs written by Steve Winwood and Will Jennings except where noted

"Higher Love" – 5:45
"Take It as It Comes" – 5:20
"Freedom Overspill" – 5:33 (Winwood, George Fleming, James Hooker)
"Back in the High Life Again " – 5:33
"The Finer Things" – 5:47
"Wake Me Up on Judgment Day" – 5:48
"Split Decision" – 5:58 (Winwood, Joe Walsh)
"My Love's Leavin'" – 5:19 (Winwood, Viv Stanshall)

NOT ONE SONG UNDER 5 MINUTES..... :music-rockout:
 
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