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What Are You Listening To?

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Re-Birth of The Cool -- CD

Gerry Mulligan

1992 GRP Records

Gerry Mulligan Re-visits His Early Collaboration With Miles October 8, 2007
By Donnie The B
Format:Audio CD

I'm quite sure that it ate at Gerry Mulligan for years - the fact that the "Birth Of The Cool" sessions could have been done better. In any case, he was motivated enough to put together a small big band like the nonet gathered by Miles Davis in 1949, and play the music that he helped write and arrange 40+ years earlier.
Gerry is a much more accomplished musician here than he was in 1949. Wallace Roney does an enthusiastic and admirable job on trumpet, in place of Miles. I like Phil Woods' alto work as much or more than Lee Konitz, who played on the 1949 sessions, but was unavailable for "Re-Birth".
I would definitely recommend that true jazz fans should own both the original and this remake - but you can hear the music so much better on this newer recording. I'm glad that Mulligan followed through on this project.

Track listing
1. Israel
2. Deception
3. Move
4. Rouge
5. Rocker
6. Godchild
7. Moon Dreams
8. Venus De Milo
9. Budo
10. Boplicity
11. Darn That Dream
12. Jeru
 
heeman said:
Rope said:

Rope,

Tell me about her music..................


Either way, I'm in LOVE!!!!! :happy-smileygiantred:

Be careful Keith, her Dad might kick your ASS!!!! :shock:


But, I see what you're sayin'!!! :bow-blue:


Dennie :eek:bscene-drinkingcheers:
 
heeman said:
Rope said:

Rope,

Tell me about her music..................


Either way, I'm in LOVE!!!!! :happy-smileygiantred:

A variation of the electronic genre referred to as "house", or "deep house". She has a really deep voice considering gender. She was nominated for a grammy.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ep8op-irROg[/youtube]
This is a collaboration with Armin Van Buuren. (DJ)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_WOwRVTKJUw[/youtube]

Rope
 
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In The Dark -- CD

Grateful Dead

1987 Arista Records

Amazon.com essential recording

Hardcore Deadheads always equate this 1987 comeback record with commercial acceptance and a watered-down fan base, but while those assertions are indeed accurate, step back and you'll hear an album full of strong material and equally solid, live-in-the-studio performances. It's more than coincidence that songs such as "Touch of Grey" (the band's only top 10 hit), "Hell in a Bucket," "West L.A. Fadeaway," and "Throwing Stones" all became staples of the Dead's last decade of touring. While longtime fans will probably have no use (or desire) for this release (especially since the CD version omits the brilliant "Brother Esau"), it remains one of the band's most successful studio forays and the quintessential icebreaker for newcomers. --Marc Greilsamer

Side one

"Touch of Grey" (Garcia, Hunter) – 5:47
"Hell in a Bucket" (Barlow, Weir) – 5:35
"When Push Comes to Shove" (Garcia, Hunter) – 4:05
"West L.A. Fadeaway" (Garcia, Hunter) – 6:39

Side two

"Tons of Steel" (Mydland) – 5:15
"Throwing Stones" (Barlow, Weir) – 7:18
"Black Muddy River" (Garcia, Hunter) – 5:58
"My Brother Esau" (Barlow, Weir) - 4:20

"My Brother Esau" was omitted from the LP and CD releases of In the Dark, but was included on the cassette and on international releases.
 
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Learning To Flinch -- CD

Warren Zevon

1993 Giant Records

Fantastic Live Performance, October 4, 2009
By DLH - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Learning to Flinch (Audio CD)

Learning to Flinch is a fantastic performance by Warren Zevon back in 1992. I especially love that the liner notes give you not only the words, but where each song was recorded. From Berlin to Auckland New Zealand, every performance is an amazing display of Warren Zevon's ability to make individual performances different from what the listener is expecting.

My personal favorite is the slide guitar he plays on Worrier King.

1. Splendid Isolation
2. Lawyers, Guns And Money
3. Mr. Bad Example
4. Excitable Boy
5. Hasten Down The Wind
6. The French Inhaler
7. Worrier King
8. Roland Chorale
9. Roland The Headless Thompson Gunner
10. Searching For A Heart
11. Boom Boom Mancini
12. Jungle Work
13. Piano Fighter
14. Werewolves Of London
15. The Indifference Of Heaven
16. Poor Poor Pitiful Me
17. Play It All Night Long
 
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In 5.1 DVD-Audio, ahhhhh.....

The King Crimson "ProjeKcts" involve one or more members of KC, along with certain select Guest Artists. This one includes Jakko Jakszyk on second guitar and vocals, who'd played with Level 42 (another favorite band of mine) and Mel Collins on horns. Really liking this one! :handgestures-thumbup:
 
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The Collection -- CD

John Denver

2002 Denon Records (Import)

Track listing

1. Annie's Song
2. Take Me Home Country Roads
3. Rocky Mountain High
4. Flower That Shattered The Stone
5. Sunshine On My Shoulders
6. Country Girl In Paris
7. Eagles And Horses (I'm Flying Again)
8. Children Of The Universe
9. Windsong
10. Postcard From Paris
11. Raven's Child
12. Eagle And The Hawk
13. Rocky Mountain Suite
14. Calypso
15. Earth Day Every Day (Celebrate)
 
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link


Don't know if some of you all like music like this style of music (chill-out or nu-jazz) but I'm hooked on this album. It's a collection of classic jazz remixed for a "fresh sound" in mind. The 2nd disc is a bit weak, imo, but the 1st disc has a hell of a groove to it.


Some of it I have (Herbie Hancock's "Maiden Voyage" for example) while most is somewhat new to me, but I do plan on checking out what the original tracks sound like.
 
Yesfan70 said:
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link


Don't know if some of you all like music like this style of music (chill-out or nu-jazz) but I'm hooked on this album. It's a collection of classic jazz remixed for a "fresh sound" in mind. The 2nd disc is a bit weak, imo, but the 1st disc has a hell of a groove to it.


Some of it I have (Herbie Hancock's "Maiden Voyage" for example) while most is somewhat new to me, but I do plan on checking out what the original tracks sound like.

That looks great! Thanks for posting it Yesfan, I've added it to my ever growing list! :handgestures-thumbup:




Dennie :eek:bscene-drinkingcheers:
 
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Time (The Revelator) -- CD

Gillian Welch

2001 Acony Records

Amazon.com's Best of 2001

The considerable promise carried forth on Gillian Welch's first two albums is thoroughly fulfilled on Time (The Revelator). Welch has traded the guidance of her previous producer, T Bone Burnett, for the sympathetic studio skills of her longtime guitarist-harmony singer David Rawlings, who loosens the reins just enough to allow moments of spontaneity to sparkle within the duo's spare, eloquent playing. "Revelator" is an instant classic, perhaps the first great folk song of the 21st century. "I Want to Sing That Rock and Roll" is three minutes of Louvins/Everlys-style bliss. "April the 14th, Part 1" haunts its historical context with an achingly melancholy melody. It all leads up to the epic 14-minute "I Dream a Highway," one of the finest closing tracks ever put on record. --Peter Blackstock


All songs written by Gillian Welch and David Rawlings.

"Revelator" – 6:22
"My First Lover" – 3:47
"Dear Someone" – 3:14
"Red Clay Halo" – 3:14
"April the 14th Part I" – 5:10
"I Want to Sing That Rock and Roll" – 2:51
"Elvis Presley Blues" – 4:53
"Ruination Day Part II" – 2:36
"Everything Is Free" – 4:48
"I Dream a Highway" – 14:39
 
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Raising Sand -- CD

Alison Krauss & Robert Plant

2007 Rounder Records

Amazon.com

Perhaps only the fantasy duo of King Kong and Bambi could be a more bizarre pairing than Robert Plant and Alison Krauss. Yet on Raising Sand, their haunting and brilliant collaboration, the Led Zeppelin screamer and Nashville's most hypnotic song whisperer seem made for each other. This, however, is not the howling Plant of "Whole Lotta Love," but a far more precise and softer singer than even the one who emerged with Dreamland (2002). No matter that Plant seems so subdued as to be on downers, for that's one of the keys to this most improbable meeting of musical galaxies--almost all of it seems slowed down, out of time, otherworldly, and at times downright David Lynch-ian, the product of an altered consciousness. Yet probably the main reason it all works so well is the choice of producer T Bone Burnette, the third star of the album, who culled mostly lesser-known material from some of the great writers of blues, country, folk, gospel, and R&B, including Tom Waits, Townes Van Zandt, Milt Campbell, the Everly Brothers, Sam Phillips, and A.D. and Rosa Lee Watson. At times, Burnette's spare and deliberate soundscape--incisively crafted by guitarists Marc Ribot and Norman Blake, bassist Dennis Crouch, drummer Jay Bellerose, and multi-instrumentalist Mike Seeger, among others--is nearly as dreamy and subterranean as Daniel Lanois's work with Emmylou Harris (Wrecking Ball). Occasionally, Burnette opts for a fairly straightforward production while still reworking the original song (Plant's own "Please Read the Letter," Mel Tillis's "Stick with Me, Baby"). But much of the new flesh on these old bones is oddly unsettling, if not nightmarish. On the opening track of "Rich Woman," the soft-as-clouds vocals strike an optimistic mood, while the instrumental backing--loose snare, ominous bass line, and insinuating electric guitar lines--create a spooky, sinister undertow. Plant and Krauss trade out the solo and harmony vocals, and while they both venture into new waters here (Krauss as a mainstream blues mama, Plant as a gospel singer and honkytonker), she steals the show in Sam Phillips' new "Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us," where a dramatic violin and tremulous banjo strike a foreboding gypsy tone. When Krauss begins this strange, seductive song in a voice so ethereal that angels will take note, you may stop breathing. That, among other reasons, makes Raising Sand an album to die for. --Alanna Nash

1. "Rich Woman" Dorothy LaBostrie, McKinley Millet 4:04
2. "Killing the Blues" Roly Jon Salley 4:16
3. "Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us" Sam Phillips 3:26
4. "Polly Come Home" Gene Clark 5:36
5. "Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On)" Don Everly, Phil Everly 3:33
6. "Through the Morning, Through the Night" Gene Clark 4:01
7. "Please Read the Letter" Charlie Jones, Michael Lee, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant 5:53
8. "Trampled Rose" Kathleen Brennan, Tom Waits 5:34
9. "Fortune Teller" Naomi Neville 4:30
10. "Stick With Me Baby" Mel Tillis 2:50
11. "Nothin'" Townes Van Zandt 5:33
12. "Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson" Milton Campbell 4:02
13. "Your Long Journey" Doc Watson, Rosa Lee Watson 3:55
 
I'm listening to the "Wild" side...... :music-rockout:


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Sweet and Wild -- Deluxe Edition 2 CD Set

Jewel

2010 Valory Records

Jewel Sweet and Wild deluxe edition will please new and old Jewel fans!,
June 8, 2010
By Porfie Medina "Porfie Jr. Medina"
This review is from: Sweet and Wild [Deluxe Edition] [2 CD] (Audio CD)

Jewels new album Sweet and Wild is another beautiful album from this one of a kind voice. I have been listening to Jewels music since 1995 when her first album Pieces of You was released. I have followed her on this amazing journey as I watch and listen to her grow as a artist. Now days Jewel is known as a country artist, but to me and many others (who followed her from the start) she is still Jewel with no labels like coutry, folk, or pop associated with her. Her music has always been more than just those labels. Her music crosses so many different styles its not fair to label her music. Sweet and Wild is a more personal album and is about love and happiness as Jewel herself says. The whole album is great, but the stand out tracks are Fading, What You Are, Satisfied, No More Heartaches, Bad As It Gets, and Stay Here Forever. This deluxe edition will please those early Jewel fans because it has a second CD which has the entire album in Acoustic (titled Sweet and Mild) just like old school Pieces of You Jewel. Both versions are beautiful, but the acoustic version gives a whole new life to the music. I highly suggest getting this amazing and beautiful album from this amazing artist known as Jewel.

Track Listing
Disc: 1 (Wild)

1. No Good In Goodbye
2. I Love You Forever
3. Fading
4. What You Are
5. As Bad As It Gets
6. Summer Home In Your Arms
7. Stay Here Forever
8. No More Heart Aches
9. One True Thing
10. Ten
11. Satisfied


Disc: 2 (deluxe edition only) - (Sweet)

1. No Good In Goodbye (Acoustic)
2. I Love You Forever (Acoustic)
3. Fading (Acoustic)
4. What You Are (Acoustic)
5. As Bad As It Gets (Acoustic)
6. Summer Home In Your Arms (Acoustic)
7. Stay Here Forever (Acoustic)
8. No More Heart Aches (Acoustic)
9. One True Thing (Acoustic)
10. Ten (Acoustic)
11. Satisfied (Acoustic)
 
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Sailing To Philadelphia -- CD

Mark Knopfler

2000 Warner Bros. Records

Amazon.com

Former Dire Straits leader Mark Knopfler's second proper solo album (he's remained preoccupied with soundtrack work through the years) is a stirring and considered set of transatlantic blues. The collection is bolstered by contributions from Van Morrison ("The Last Laugh") and James Taylor (the title track), while Knopfler's guitar playing remains fresh and alive as he merges country and folk picking with electric blues. But it's as a writer that he really impresses: "Baloney Again" is a sensitive portrayal of a black gospel outfit in Jim Crow America; the title track is an intriguing distillation of Thomas Pynchon's doorstopper novel, Mason & Dixon; and "Silvertown Blues" is a stirring appreciation of blue-collar endeavor. A lovingly and honestly crafted collection, Sailing to Philadelphia shows Knopfler's talent and commitment remain as strong as ever. --Gavin Martin

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Dennie said:
Yesfan70 said:
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link


Don't know if some of you all like music like this style of music (chill-out or nu-jazz) but I'm hooked on this album. It's a collection of classic jazz remixed for a "fresh sound" in mind. The 2nd disc is a bit weak, imo, but the 1st disc has a hell of a groove to it.


Some of it I have (Herbie Hancock's "Maiden Voyage" for example) while most is somewhat new to me, but I do plan on checking out what the original tracks sound like.

That looks great! Thanks for posting it Yesfan, I've added it to my ever growing list! :handgestures-thumbup:




Dennie :eek:bscene-drinkingcheers:



I think you'll dig it. It's just relaxing music and great to play in the background when guests are over.
 
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Just Because I'm A Woman - Songs of Dolly Parton -- CD

Various Artists

2003 Sugar Hill Records

Amazon.com

It’s Joan Osborne who sums it up best in the promotional material accompanying this tribute album: " Dolly Parton is a gifted artist cleverly disguised as a media superstar and sex bomb." Osborne’s got it right. Beyond and beneath Parton’s well-publicized and oft-caricatured curves and angles, lurks the heart and soul of one of modern country music’s very best songwriters--the best, perhaps, since the great Loretta Lynn. In fitting celebration of the 35th anniversary of the release of Just Because I’m A Woman, Parton’s very first solo album, contemporary leading ladies of country and pop, including Norah Jones, Alison Krauss, Shania Twain, Joan Osborne, Melissa Etheridge, Emmylou Harris, and Sinead O’Connor have offered up worthy new interpretations of some of Parton’s classic compositions. That said, some of the highlights here are from lesser-known singers: Mindy Smith’s haunting rendition of "Jolene," Kasey Chambers’ bitter-sweet take on "Little Sparrow," and Allison Moorer’s tender turn on "Light Of A Clear Blue Morning." --Bob Allen

"9 to 5" - Alison Krauss
"I Will Always Love You" - Melissa Etheridge
"The Grass Is Blue" - Norah Jones
"Do I Ever Cross Your Mind" - Joan Osborne
"The Seeker" - Shelby Lynne
"Jolene" - Mindy Smith
"To Daddy" - Emmylou Harris
"Coat of Many Colors" - Shania Twain and Alison Krauss
"Little Sparrow" - Kasey Chambers
"Dagger Through the Heart" - Sinéad O'Connor
"Light of a Clear Blue Morning" - Allison Moorer
"Two Doors Down" - Me'shell Ndegeocello
"Just Because I'm a Woman" - Dolly Parton
 
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