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Misterioso -- Remastered CD

Thelonious Monk Quartet

1958/1989 Riverside/OJC Records

When the quartet featured on MISTERIOSO was burning up the Five Spot back in 1958, they came under attack from fickle fans and critics, seemingly for no other reason than that they weren't the 1957 model (featuring John Coltrane, Wilbur Ware and Shadow Wilson). But the wit, wonder and vigorous interplay of this quartet enliven these performances to such a degree, it's impossible to discern what the big deal was about. This is an amazing band.Listening to tenor virtuoso Johnny Griffin on "Blues Five Spot," it's clear that for him Monk's music was almost second nature. Like fellow tenor giant Sonny Rollins, Griffin understood the rhythmic impetus behind Monk's melodies, and his penchant for witty interpolations allowed him to work a ditty such as "The Sailor's Hornpipe" into the conclusion of his unaccompanied chorus. Also, if you listen to how he and Monk reprise the head (and introduce "Let's Cool One"), you'll note the saxophonist's ability to voice his lines in such a way as to suggest different saxophone ranges, and even multiple horns when playing in unison with the pianist.Which leads to an epic level of collective call-and-response throughout MISTERIOSO. The multi-leveled "Let's Cool One" has a main theme and an equally important counter-line, and during their collective improvisation, Griffin and Monk manage to maintain this antiphonal balance of preacher and congregation. Even when the band drops away for another solo Griffin break, the counter-lines and cross-rhythms keep going in the listener's mind until Monk returns with fresh abstractions and a hint of stride. Of the remaining performances, "In Walked Bud" and the title tune generate the most collective heat. On the former, the pianist counters Griffin's own Monkisms with sly rhythmic abstractions of the tune's main thematic accents, which Haynes echoes in his solo. And on "Misterioso," Monk's trademark blues, the pianist's stark harmonic juxtapositions preclude any hint of clich‚d postures, as he and Griffin dig down deep into this timeless form.

Track Listing
1. Nutty
2. Blues Five Spot
3. Let's Cool One
4. In Walked Bud
5. Just a Gigolo
6. Misterioso
7. Evidence
8. 'Round Midnight

Thelonious Monk Quartet: Thelonious Monk (piano); Johnny Griffin (tenor saxophone); Ahmed Abdul-Malik (bass); Roy Haynes (drums).Recorded live at The Five Spot Cafe, New York, New York on August 7, 1958. Originally released on Riverside (1133). Includes liner notes by Orrin Keepnews.Digitally remastered using 20-bit K2 Super Coding System technology.
 
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Greenhouse -- CD

Yellowjackets

1991 GRP Records

One of the best Fusion Albums of the '90s June 13, 2007
By Brian Whistler VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase

Look, Yellowjackets got a bad rep they don't deserve. True, they started off as a more rock oriented fuzak unit but the good news is, they grew up. This CD is the proof of that assertion. Ferrante proved himself to be a fine composer and with the addition of Bob Mintzer's ballsy tenor, this unit finally pulled away from the smooth jazz arena they had languished in. Not to disparage the other guy, but in the end, he was a lick player. Mintzer is the real deal, a jazz player with a big vocabulary who really knows his stuff. And he can write! And arrange.

This is a mature effort with not a single dud track. None other than Vince Mendoza did the string arrangments and for those in doubt, these are NOT empty sweetening, but amazingly challenging and creative parts that augment the tunes without getting in the way or diluting quartet sound. And William Kennedy is simply the best drummer around for this kind of music. He makes it all feel great. As Gary Burton once said, "you only sound as good as your drummer." No wonder the 'Jackets never sounded better. When they lost William, they lost their heartbeat.

Pity this is out of print. It is one for the ages, and easily the most ambitious and best Yellowjackets recording of their entire output. This is NOT timid jazz.

Track Listing
1. Freedomland
2. Greenhouse
3. Seven Stars
4. Indian Summer
5. Spirits
6. Brown Zone
7. Liam / Rain Dance
8. Invisible People
9. Freda
10. Peace
 
Amazing new album, "Fuego" by Phish. I am surprised by how well they capture some of their live energy into this album. This has some awesome tunes. Definitely worth a listen if you get the opportunity.

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Madman Across The Water -- CD

Elton John

1971 Polydor Records

The first of the best, April 27, 2011
By L. Lawhead "LSquared" (SW Illinois) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
This review is from: Madman Across the Water (Audio CD)

This was the first Elton John album I owned (on vinyl), and there was no doubt about upgrading to CD/digital. A very solid offering from what I consider his peak period. From Madman, to Honky Chateau, into Don't Shoot Me, culminating with Goodbye Yellow Brick. All excellent, all worth having. Looking back over 35+ years, I'd rate this as the least excellent of that quartet, but all are worthy. But Madman (which peaked at only #8) laid the groundwork for the subsequent string of #1 albums.

Levon was the hit, peaking at #24, and Tiny Dancer just missed the Top 40 (peaked at #41). Both were mainstays of AOR radio, as was the title track. All are classic songs.

The rest of the album is not quite as as memorable. Holiday Inn & Rotten Peaches are certainly solid. But Indian Sunset always seemed a little overblown, and I never quite got the whole think about an Englishman singing (fisrt person) about the plight of the Native Americans... All The Nasties and Goodbbye are pretty much forgettable. Not bad, but certainly not essential.

1. "Tiny Dancer" 6:15
2. "Levon" 5:22
3. "Razor Face" 4:44
4. "Madman Across the Water" 5:56
5. "Indian Sunset" 6:45
6. "Holiday Inn" 4:17
7. "Rotten Peaches" 4:56
8. "All the Nasties" 5:08
9. "Goodbye" 1:48

When this album was issued on cassette MCA swapped the places of "Razor Face" and "Rotten Peaches" on side one and two of the tape. The SACD version of the album contained a longer version of "Razor Face" which extended the song-ending jam to 6:42 instead of the early fade on the original album.

The song "Holiday Inn" was written for Adam Diaz. An additional verse in the recorded version that was originally part of the song was either omitted during recording or edited out of the final album version. It can, however, be heard on "unofficial" live recordings of the song from some of his concerts during this period, which have circulated among collectors.
 
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Autumn In Seattle -- 32 Bit Ultra-HD CD

Tsuyoshi Yamamoto Trio

2012 First Impression Music

This Ultra HD 32-Bit Mastering CD will play on ALL CD players!

This album features the artistry of one of Japan's top pianist's. When asked about the title of this album, Tsuyoshi Yamamoto had this to say: "I wrote this piece especially for this album and dedicated it to Winston Ma, the producer. I asked Winston to name the song. After hearing the song, Winston said he was reminded of the emotions he felt when he first saw the skyline of Seattle during an Autumn visit to the city some years go." Hence the name. Let Tsuyoshi lead you to a warm and romantic dreamland through his enchanting piano performances.

Ultra High Definition 32-Bit Mastering is a proprietary ultra-high-quality mastering system. This leading-edge system has achieved unprecedented sonority and musicality, reproducing as closely as possible the sound of the original master tape! This format employs what is currently the highest attainable resolution bit depth (word length) in the professional audio field, i.e. 32-bit. 32-bit resolution makes possible maximized, undistorted dynamics, and the lowest noise floor, allowing even the quietest musical information to be heard more clearly. This breakthrough results from the development, through years of experience and application of advanced digital technology, of a sophisticated A/D and D/A processing system.

Ultra HD 32-Bit Mastering does not specify a sampling rate; this allows flexibility in meticulously choosing the appropriate bandwidth for a particular recording. The higher the sampling rate -- for example, 192 kHz -- the greater the bandwidth. However, merely employing the greatest bandwidth may not guarantee the ultimate sound. With some recordings, a lower sampling rate -- 96 or 176 kHz -- may offer better musicality and more homogeneous harmonics. This determination requires careful and discerning auditioning and professional judgment. In the end, the human being’s hearing and emotions should be the final arbiter, rather than the print-out of testing equipment or technical measurements.

Recognizing these variables, FIM nevertheless tries to use 32-bit depth and 192 kHz bandwidth whenever the original analog master is at hand. Alternatively, if the original recording is on 24/96, the 32/96 may eventually be used to maintain the integrity of the sonority particular to that recording. With this flexibility, First Impression Music believes that preeminent sound is only achievable when the chemistry of the recording, mastering, glass-stamper making, replication, and quality control is right. As always, listening is believing.

This recording has been mastered by the new Ultra High Definition 32-Bit Mastering process, which creates an unbelievable sound surpassing other formats!

1. The Way We Were (Marvin Hamlisch)
2. Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head (Burt Bacharach)
3. Autumn In Seattle
4. Misty (Erroll Garner)
5. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing (Sammy Fain)
6. Theme From Spartacus (Khachaturian)
7. No Problem (Duke Jordan)
8. As Time Goes By (Herman Hupfeld)
9. Sound Of Music Medley (Richard Rodgers)
10. A Time For Us (Nino Rota)

Musicians:
Tsuyoshi Yamamoto, piano
Ken Kaneko, bass
Toshio Osumi, drums
 
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Kicking Cans -- CD

Dori Caymmi

1993 Qwest/Warner Bros. Records

An air of lush romanticism and tropical melancholy pervades the music on KICKING CANS. Brazilian film composer Dori Caymmi has assembled here a cast of Brazilian musicians and American jazz stars such as Branford Marsalis and Herbie Hancock.The mysterious wordless vocal of "Migration" unfolds over a backdrop of Brazilian percussion and Caymmi's assertive chord work on nylon string guitar. Caymmi's hesitant tenor vocals add to the plaintive tone--he's a guy with a lump in his throat and his heart on his sleeve. There is urgency in this music, and a hint of menace, too. The shifting time signatures and skewed melodies conspire to keep the listener comfortably off balance--the music goes where it has to go, like a river meandering lazily through a rain forest. The centerpiece is the sultry re-working of "Brazil," featuring a reflective and dazzling performance by Herbie Hancock. With its yearning melody and sensual guitar, "My Countryside" captures the overall cinematic feel of this CD. It throbs, and sobs.

Track Listing
1. Migration
2. Forever Lover and Friend
3. It's Raining (At Buriti Farm)
4. From the Sea
5. Brasil - (Aquarela Do Brasil mix)
6. Kicking Cans
7. Spring - (Portuguese)
8. Northeast
9. Hurricane Country
10. My Countryside

Personnel: Dori Caymmi (vocals, guitar); Ricardo Silveira (electric guitar, 12-string guitar); Yutaka Yokokura (koto); Teco Cardodso (alto flute); Suzie Kattayama (accordion); Branford Marsalis (soprano saxophone); Herbie Hancock, Billy Childs (piano); Don Grusin, Gregg Karukas (keyboards); Claudio Slon , Michael Shapiro (drums); Everaldo Ferreira, Paulinho Da Costa (percussion); Arnold McCutler, Ivan Lins, Kate Markowitz, Kevyn Lettau (background vocals).Recording information: Castle Oaks Studio; Groove Masters Studio; Mad Hatter Studio; Transamerica Studios, Sao Paulo, Brazil; Westlake Studio.Arranger: Dori Caymmi.
 
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Aretha's Gold -- Ultradisc Gain-2 SACD # 00375

Aretha Franklin

1969/2013 Atlantic/MFSL

Aretha Franklin Aretha's Gold on Numbered Limited Edition Hybrid SACD

Astonishing Collection of The Queen of Soul's Greatest Songs for Atlantic Records

Aretha Franklin made her Hall of Fame reputation at Atlantic Records between 1967-1968. This astonishing two-year period witnessed the singer score nine Top 10 hits and define soul music. Pairing with producer Jerry Wexler and a flawless Muscle Shoals studio band, Franklin unleashed bolder sides of her artistry kept under wraps during her tenure at Columbia. The rest is history—a history that, until now, has never been in heard in true audiophile sound. And if there's any voice you want to experience to the most realistic extent, it's that of the vocalist Rolling Stone crowned the Greatest Singer of All Time.

Hear why Franklin is even better than you likely think or remember. You just haven't been able to hear the Detroit native on a format that mirrors exactly what went down in the studios when she recorded songs that, to this day, remain the bar by which all other singers are measured. The same goes for Franklin's backing band, known as the Swampers, whose instrumental savvy, feel, and textures are so unique, the group is credited with creating its own style: The Muscle Shoals Sound. On this edition of Aretha's Gold, experience every picked guitar note, brushed snare, and fluid bass line. Seldom has a band and vocalist ever made a more formidable, memorable, and emotional combination.

The evidence plays out across these 14 songs, each a soul landmark, each unforgettable thanks to Franklin's impassioned performances and empowering attitude. The Sweet Impressions (Franklin's backing vocalists) and sweeping string arrangements bolster the foundation, but the material belongs to Franklin. A veritable hit parade, the track listing on Aretha's Gold reads like a dictionary of soul.


Track Listing:

1. I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)
2. Do Right Woman-Do Right Man
3. Respect
4. Dr. Feelgood
5. Baby I Love You
6. (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman
7. Chain of Fools
8. Since You've Been Gone (Sweet Sweet Baby)
9. Ain't No Way
10. Think
11. You Send Me
12. The House That Jack Built
13. I Say a Little Prayer
14. See Saw
 
Enjoying this one a lot this morning. Got a really nice mellow groove to it, but some seriously good playing (and singing) under the surface.

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Urban Gypsy -- CD

Marc Antoine

1998 GRP Records

Rarely has an album title so perfectly encapsulated the essence of a hybrid project as Marc Antoine's smartly realized Urban Gypsy. Usually in rhythm and jazz, soul-based loop electronics back up horns like trumpet or sax, and flamenco guitar strains are left to those who can provide more Latin-styled backbeats. But Antoine creates hypnotic soundscapes both by machine, doing all the programming himself, and organically, with the help of Steve Reid and Luis Conte. On up-tempo swings, he gets the hip-hop grooving before texturing his bold acoustic precision. And his ballads allow for some clever improvisation between streams of cool strumming. A flair for Brazilian zing explodes on an all-too-short interlude before Antoine returns to his homeland for a street carnival shuffle appropriately titled "Paris Jam." All-star assistance is provided by Rachel Z (a bluesy Fender Rhodes jaunt) and Jimmy Haslip. This spectacular fusion of styles and melodic flair can take its rightful place at the top of either genre it touches upon. ~ Jonathan Widran

Track listing

1. Latin Quarter
2. Quand Le Jazz Hip-Hop
3. Sand Castle
4. Steppin'
5. Matador, El
6. First Rain
7. Urban Gypsy
8. Forget-Me-Not
9. Brazil '96
10. Paris Jam
11. Hollywood Viscount
12. Storytime
 
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Shoot Out The Lights -- CD

Richard & Linda Thompson

1982/2004 Rykodisc/VACK Records (Import Japan)

The world's most underrated songwriter, although Thompson must tire of hearing it so often. Together with his ex-wife Linda they made a series of quite brilliant albums that garnered heaps of praise and minimal sales. This is another slice of perfection that veers from whimsical fun in 'Wall Of Death' to desperate emotions in 'Shoot Out the Lights', which features the definitive Thompson guitar solo. Critics have often been accused of hyping artists, but try as they may, they can't do it with this one. Time will tell but this album should be in many more homes.

Track Listing
1. Don't Renege on Our Love
2. Walking on a Wire
3. Man in Need
4. Just the Motion
5. Shoot Out the Lights
6. Back Street Slide
7. Did She Jump or Was She Pushed?
8. Wall of Death
9. Living In Luxury - Bonus Track

Richard & Linda Thompson: Richard Thompson (vocals, guitar, dulcimer, accordion); Linda Thompson (vocals).Additional personnel: Stephen Corbett, Brian Jones (cornet); Stephen Barnett , Mark Cutts (trombone); Phil Goodwin (tuba); Pete Zorn (bass instrument, background vocals); Dave Pegg (bass instrument); Dave Mattacks (drums); Clive Gregson (background vocals).
 
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River: The Joni Letters -- CD

Herbie Hancock

2007 Verve Records

Amazon.com
On paper, River sounds like a match made in several versions of heaven. Legendary pianist Herbie Hancock re-imagines Joni Mitchell with his hand-picked, star-studded band--including saxophonist Wayne Shorter--in tow. Luminary guests lend vocals to a song apiece: Norah Jones ("Court and Spark"), Tina Turner ("Edith and the Kingpin"), Corinne Bailey Rae ("River"), Luciana Souza ("Amelia"), Leonard Cohen (with an unsettlingly sanguine version of "The Jungle Line"), even Mitchell herself ("Tea Leaf Prophecy"). In the event, though, a few fundamental elements go awry. Hancock plays with almost saccharine understatement throughout, and even Shorter's seminal "Nefertiti" and Duke Ellington's "Solitude" fall into the album's presiding, somnolent surface, though to a lesser degree does the instrumental version of Mitchell's "Sweet Bird." But girding, and in some measure, saving, the proceedings, the lyrics here testify to a subtler wisdom guiding Hancock's set list. The mix includes a continuum from intrepid classics to dusty, fans-only fare, but a distinct reverence for Joni Mitchell the Poet threads them together, and, in the end, this album works best as a sleepy window into one fan's giddy and particular love affair with his source material. Fans of Hancock win out. --Jason Kirk

TRACK LISTING:

Court and Spark - Featuring Norah Jones - 7:35
Edith and the Kingpin - Featuring Tina turner - 6:32
Both Sides Now - 7:38
River - Featuring Corinne Bailey Rae - 5:25
Sweet Bird - 8:15
Tea Leaf Prophecy (Joni Mitchell - Larry Klein) - Featuring Joni Mitchell - 6:34
Solitude (Edgar De Lange - Duke Ellington - Irving Mills) - 5:42
Amelia - Featuring Luciana Souza - 7:26
Nefertiti (Wayne Shorter) - 7:30
The Jungle Line - Featuring Leonard Cohen - 5:01
 
Happy Sunday everyone.... :banana-dance:



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At Last -- SACD

The Gene Harris/Scott Hamilton Quintet with Herb Ellis, Ray Brown & Harold Jones

1990/2004 Concord Jazz

If anyone ever asks you what jazz is, words won’t do. Just play this music. The pulse, the flowing time that is the nurturing essence of jazz is distilled by Gene Harris, Herb Ellis, Harold Jones, and Ray Brown as they shape rhythm waves on which Scott Hamilton’s tenor glides, dives, and soars. And Gene Harris, when he solos, also rides the tides of the past as well as the powerful presence of the moment. Each of the players has a full, open, personal sound—and each always has sound in mind...It is being heralded as a lost art that has been rediscovered. But the guys on this date have never lost that art.”—Nat Hentoff (From the original 1990 liner notes)

Track listing

1. You Are My Sunshine
2. It Never Entered My Mind
3. After You've Gone
4. Lamp Is Low, The
5. At Last
6. Blues for Gene
7. I Fall in Love Too Easily
8. Some of These Days
9. Stairway to the Stars
10. Sittin' in the Sandtrap

Gene Harris (piano); Scott Hamilton (tenor saxophone); Herb Ellis (guitar); Ray Brown (double bass); Harold Jones (drums).
 
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Plays Standards -- 24k Gold CD

Steve Kuhn Trio

2007 Venus Records (Import Japan)

Veteran jazz pianist Steve Kuhn has proved to be a popular artist in Japan, recording a series of CDs for the Japanese label Venus. On these 2006 sessions, Kuhn is joined by bassist Buster Williams and drummer Al Foster, two artists who also have extensive résumés. While the CD is titled Plays Standards, Kuhn doesn't stick exclusively to well-known works. In addition to Victor Young's widely recognized "Beautiful Love" (a favorite of pianist Bill Evans), the pianist offers a seductive take of the composer's "Golden Earrings" and a lighthearted, breezy setting of "Love Letters" as well. Kuhn's intense workout of "Alone Together" includes an amusing detour into Thelonious Monk's "Locomotive," while his revamping of "Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise" disguises the tune rather well. Kuhn also revisits his original "Oceans in the Sky," a brilliant piece evocative of a coming storm. Highly recommended. Review by Ken Dryden

Track Listings:

1. Alone Together
2. Golden Earrings
3. I Wish I Knew
4. Left Alone
5. Blue Bossa
6. Nature Boy
7. Softly As In A Morning
8. You Leave Me Breathless
9. Oceans In The Sky
10. I See Your Face Before
11. Love Letters
12. Beautiful Love


Performed by Steve Kuhn Trio

Steve Kuhn <piano>
Buster Williams <bass>
Al Foster <drums>
 
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The Three Americas -- CD

Eliane Elias

1997 Blue Note Records

THE THREE AMERICAS are apparently seen most elegantly and swingingly from Brazil, as this album by Brazilian pianist Elias combines jazz, Afro-Caribbean and Brazilian music in a natural and uplifting way. The space and colors of Brazilian music leave room for Elias and her band to blend other traditions into the recipe, transmuting the recipe into something fresh. Spain is evoked in "Chorango" with the addition of violin and accordion; Dave Valentin's flute gracefully takes over, doubling the piano melodies, on "Crystal and Lace;" on "Caipora," Cuban basslines support Cafe's Brazilian percussion. All this is combined with the modern jazz forms of Elias' compositions. She's a talented singer too, crooning in a melismatic Brazilian style on the opening cut "An Up Dawn" and offering a fresh interpretation of Jobim's "Brigas Nunca Mais".

Track Listing
1. An Up Dawn
2. The Time Is Now
3. Caipora
4. Chorango
5. Chega de Saudade
6. Crystal and Lace
7. Nunca Mais Brigas
8. Introduction to Guarani
9. O Guarani
10. Jungle Journey
11. Missing You
12. Jumping Fox

Personnel: Eliane Elias (vocals, piano); Amanda Elias Brecker (vocals); Oscar Castro-Neves (guitar, acoustic guitar); Mark Feldman (violin); Marc Johnson (strings, acoustic bass, background vocals); Dave Valentin (flute); Gil Goldstein (accordion); Satoshi Takeishi (drums, background vocals); Caf‚ (percussion, background vocals); Manolo Badrena (percussion).Audio Mixer: James Farber.Recording information: Avatar Studios, New York, NY (1996).Photographer: Lisa Peardon.Arranger: Eliane Elias.
 
Started to listen to this on the way into work this AM. I hate to say it, however I am not very impressed with this one. I will continue to listen during the week and let you know if my opinion changes.

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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.
 
Today's work truck music...



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We'll Never Turn Back -- CD

Mavis Staples

2007 Anti Records

Mavis Staple's 2007 album, WE'LL NEVER TURN BACK is a stunning achievement from one of soul and gospel's most revered singers. Produced by Ry Cooder, the album is built around freedom songs of the civil rights movement--some are traditional ("Eyes on the Prize"), some are appropriated for the theme ("99 and 1/2"), while others are originals ("I'll Be Rested"). As much a celebration of hard-won freedom as a reminder of past and current injustices, the album features stirring gospel choir vocals from both Ladysmith Black Mombazo and original members of the SNCC Freedom Singers.Yet the album is first and foremost a platform for Mavis Staples's stirring voice, one that is as much a liberating force as any protest. Cooder, to his credit, keeps things appropriately raw and immediate, and the band always positions Staples at the front of the line. As deeply moving as any album made in 2007, WE'LL NEVER TURN BACK is at once a call to arms, a new cadence for a new march, and the celebratory soundtrack for the jubilee on the other side of the mountain.

Track Listing
1. Down in Mississippi
2. Eyes on the Prize
3. We Shall Not Be Moved
4. In the Mississippi River
5. On My Way
6. This Little Light of Mine
7. 99 and 1/2
8. My Own Eyes
9. Turn Me Around
10. We'll Never Turn Back
11. I'll Be Rested
12. Jesus Is on the Main Line

Personnel: Mavis Staples (vocals); Ry Cooder (guitar, mandolin); Mike Elizondo (piano); Jim Keltner (drums); Joachim Cooder (percussion); Betty Fikes, Charles Neblett, Rutha Harris (background vocals).Audio Mixer: Martin Pradler.Liner Note Author: Rep. John Lewis.Recording information: Sound City Studio, Van Nuys, CA.Author: Mavis Staples.Photographer: David Bartlett.Arrangers: Ry Cooder; Joachim Cooder; Mavis Staples.
 
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