| 1. Ill Be Creepin |
| 2. Songs Of Yesterday |
| 3. Lying In The Sunshine |
| 4. Trouble On Double Time |
| 5. Mouthful Of Grass |
| 6. Woman |
| 7. Free Me |
| 8. Broad Daylight |
| 9. Mourning Sad Morning |
| 10. Broad Daylight (Single Version) |
| 11. The Worm (Single Version) |
| 12. Il Be Creepin (Single Version) |
| 13. Sugar For Mr Morrison (Single Version) |
| 14. Broad Daylight (BBC Session) |
| 15. Songs Of Yesterday (BBC Session) |
| 16. Mouthful Of Grass (Solo Version) |
| 17. Woman (Alternative Version) |
| 18. Trouble On Double Time (Early Version) |
| 19. Mourning Sad Morning (Alternative Version) |
Editorial Reviews
UK reissue of the British hard rock act's 1969 album, digitally remastered at Abbey Road with ten bonus tracks including single versions of 'Broad Daylight', 'The Worm', I'll Be Creepin', 'Sugar For Mr. Morrison' & BBC sessions of 'Broad Daylight' & 'Songs Of Yestarday' & 'Mouthful Of Grass' (solo version), 'Woman' (alt. version), 'Trouble On Double Time' (early version) & 'Mourning Sad Morning' (alt. version). 2001.
Free,Free,Universal Int'l,Album Rock,Blues-Rock,Hard Rock,Pop,Rock,Rock/Pop
Free [Original recording remastered] [Import]
Average customer rating:
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A Love Supreme
John Coltrane Manufacturer: Impulse Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000A118M Release Date: 2003-08-19 |
Tracks:
- Acknowledgement
- Resolution
- Pursuance
- Psalm
Amazon.com
A Love Supreme is a suite about redemption, a work of pure spirit and song, that encapsulates all the struggles and aspirations of the 1960s. Following hard on the heels of the lyrical, swinging Crescent, A Love Supreme heralded Coltrane's search for spiritual and musical freedom, as expressed through polyrhythms, modalities, and purely vertical forms that seemed strange to some jazz purists, but which captivated more adventurous listeners (and rock fellow travelers such as the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and the Byrds), while initiating a series of volatile, unruly prayer offerings, including Kulu Su Mama, Ascension, Om, Meditations, Expression, Interstellar Space. From the urgent speech-like timbre of his tenor, to the serpentine textures and earthy groove of Elvin Jones's drumming, Coltrane's suite proceeds with escalating intensity, conveying a hard-fought wisdom and a beckoning serenity in the prayer-like drones of "Psalm," where Jones rolls and rumbles like thunder as Garrison and Tyner toll away suggestively--all the while Coltrane searches for that one climactic note worthy of the love he wants to share. --Chip SternCustomer Reviews:
Masterpiece.......2007-06-26
Coltrane does it again!.......2007-06-11
Rookie Coltrane Listener.......2007-05-26
But now as I reach the half-way point in my fifties, I wanted to force my self to listen and try to see just what it is about Coltrane that so many folks find extrodinary. So my friend recommended A Love Supreme. I listened and listened and virtually immersed my self in the recording until passages became familiar. Now I have a glimmer, an embryonic appreciation of the man's gift. I put it on for my 17 year old daughter and she loves it! It grows on you and I think maybe for the first time I'm experiencing what that type of jazz can do for you. Live & learn!
Deeply moving..........2007-04-20
Indispensable to all music listeners.......2007-04-08
Of the recordings after "A Love Supreme," "Transition" achieves a similar visionary ascent, though much of the recorded documentation of Coltrane's last two years is likely to prove inaccessible or at least less engaging to the average listener. It's music "in" but also "of" the moment, a record of pain and anger, protest and revolution, carrying an unmistakable political subtext that frequently overwhelms the main musical text.
Arguably the most influential instrumentalist of the past 50 years, Coltrane left the listener plenty of choices, should the recordings after "A Love Supreme" prove unsatisfying. "My Favorite Things" is the perfect antidote to the cloying soprano sax sound of Kenny G. (as is the soprano sax playing of the deeply expressive and moving traditionalist, Sidney Bechet). For every serious musician, however, perhaps the one recording by Coltrane that belongs at the top is "Giant Steps." Once a musician has mastered the dominant-tonic movement of popular harmonies, the next essential step is learning how to negotiate the "Giant Steps"/"Count Down" harmonic movement that Coltrane introduced. Before learning the theory, however, a listener needs to experience the stunning freshness that is its musical result. With the motivation, the theory is likely to be realized far more efficiently and effectively.
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Monkeys for Nothin' and the Chimps for Free
Reel Big Fish Manufacturer: Rock Ridge Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000QGE7OI Release Date: 2007-07-10 |
Tracks:
- Party Down
- Another F.U. Song
- Live Your Dream
- My Imaginary Friend
- Slow Down
- The New Version Of You
- Will the Revolution Come?
- Another Day In Paradise
- Everybody's Drunk
- Please Don't Tell Her I Have a Girlfriend
- Way Back
- Hate You
- Call You
- Why Do All Girls Think They're Fat
- I'm Her Man
- Til I Hit the Ground
- Cannibal
Album Details
After More Than 15 Years of Conveying Negative Vibes, Warning Listeners About the Dangers of Being in a Band and Lamenting their Time in the Music Industry (Case in Point: The Band's Radio Hit, "Sell Out"), the Members of Southern California Ska-punk Stalwarts Reel Big Fish Want to Let the World Know of a Big Change: They're Finally Happy. The Self-produced Monkeys for Nothin' and the Chimps for Free is Reel Big Fish's First Independent Studio Album Since Leaving their Former Label and it Finds the Members of Reel Big Fish Doing Things their Way. In Fact, it features Material Done their Way, from Quite a Long Ways Back.Customer Reviews:
RBF going back to what they are great at.......2007-07-23
RBF comes back with a really solid SKA cd that reminds me why I love these guys. Most of the songs are good with a few that I didn't care for (Cannibal, Party Down, & Everybody's Drunk).
The good ones are the traditional fun-loving, happy-go-lucky, ska/rock that RBF is known for. I'd put "Another F.U. Song", "My Imaginary Friend", & "Why do all Girls Think they're Fat" in this category. Really good songs; very happy, lots of horns, things that RBF do well.
In my opinion, RBFs' true talent can be heard in songs like "Slow Down", "Will the Revolution Come", "Way Back", & "Another Day in Paradise". They are just really great, what I would call, "traditional" ska songs with much less rock/punk influence (if that makes any sense). I always come back to RBF after every new release because of their ability to create excellent ska music. After hearing "A Little Doubt Goes a Long Way" on their previous release, I hoped this next album would sound more like that. In my opinion there wasn't enough "traditional ska" which is why it only got a 4 out of 5 stars.
So after all that, this is a really good cd & definitely worth your money. If you are a RBF fan, buy it. If you are new to ska/RBF - get Turn the Radio Off first. After you hear that one, you'll be hooked & end up buying this cd anyway...that is in addition to all their other ones (with the possible exception of Cheer Up).
Please enter a title for your review.......2007-07-22
The chord progressions are often bland, the guitar tone is too bassy and lacking in gain, the riffs never really rock and the melodies rarely pop as much as they could, but it's hooky enough most of the time with the funny lyrics and energetic vocals picking up the slack, and the band are at their best on the slower reggaeish tracks Slow Down and Will The Revolution Come and the guitar soloing outro to the album which is reminiscent of the outro jam on Why Do They Rock So Hard. The only dud tracks for me are Live Your Dream and Everybody's Drunk.
The bonus DVD, which was a purchasing incentive for me, is 20 minutes of footage of the band in the studio which I found pretty disappointing.
I'd probably rather watch a sitcom Aaron wrote than listen to his songwriting at this point but I do rank this as one of the top 20 albums of the year so far.
Good Album.......2007-07-16
They Just Came To Party Down.......2007-07-13
This album's best moments continue in Reel Big Fish's tradition of mixing ska energy with other musical conventions and interesting arrangements, from "My Imaginary Friend" - which sounds like the theme song from a children's show about atheism - to "Please Don't Tell Her I Have A Girlfriend," where the band sounds like They Might Be Giants and Billy Joel teaming up to sing a sweet drinking sway about infidelity (from the cheater's point of view, of course). It's also hard not to crack a smile during the hair metal guitar solo on "Drunk Tonight" (And, if not during the solo, at least during the hilarious Twisted Sister breakdown). Album closer "Cannibal" is another standout, as Reel Big Fish unleashes their inner Oingo Boingo for about three-and-a-half minutes before launching into an epic heavy metal epilogue.
RBF has a strong contingent of fans who (for whatever reason) profess only to like the band's first two albums. These traditionalists will enjoy the more straightforward ska-punk of "Another F.U. Song," "Live Your Dream," and "The New Version of You," not to mention a cover of Phil Collins's "Another Day in Paradise," danceable tracks that hearken back to the band's roots in the 1990s ska explosion.
Though the mood on this CD is lighter than other RBF efforts, lead singer Aaron Barrett still exudes some of his trademark pessimism. Not only does he ponder life in a godless universe, but he also notes in "Will the Revolution Come?" that "each generation's mess is bigger than the one before them has made."
MFNATCFF also includes re-recordings of old songs reaching as far back as "Everything Sucks," and even a pre-"Everything Sucks" demo. "Hate You," "Call You," "I'm Her Man," and "'Til I Hit The Ground" all sound ten times better on this disc, aided largely by the addition of Scott Klopfestein's excellent backing vocals, which have been one of RBF's best features since "Turn the Radio Off." It doesn't hurt that they've been re-recorded on such a clean-sounding album, which is a refreshing change from "We're Not Happy...," a disc whose vocals could have been recorded in a port-a-potty using an iBook's onboard microphone. Highly recommended!
It's a good time.......2007-07-13
However, in the end this album is saved by the last few tracks which include mostly re-recorded songs off of Everything Sucks, and they sound amazing, and completely original because they were written when Reel Big Fish hadn't run out of material to write about. But don't take this review and my negativity the wrong way. It's a very good album, and there are some amazing songs on here, re-recorded and new, but it's apparent how little time they spent on it which was said to be just around a few months.
Overall, I loved to see that Reel Big Fish has made a full return to their ska roots, and the only thing this album is short of is just a pinch of originality and it'd be a 5 star album no doubt. Definitely check this one out!
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Free to Be You and Me
Marlo Thomas Manufacturer: Arista ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000F2CC0E Release Date: 2006-05-09 |
Tracks:
- Free To Be You And Me - The New Seekers
- Boy Meets Girl - Mel Brooks and Marlo Thomas
- When We Grow Up - Diana Ross
- Don't Dress Your Cat In An Apron - Billy De Wolfe
- Parents Are People - Harry Belafonte and Marlo Thomas
- Housework - Carol Channing
- Helping - Tom Smothers
- Ladies First - Marlo Thomas
- Dudley Pippin And The Principal - Billy De Wolfe, Marko Thomas, Bobby Morse
- It's All Right To Cry - Rosey Grier
- Sisters And Brothers - Sisters and Brothers
- My Dog Is A Plumber - Dick Cavett
- William's Doll - Alan Alda and Marlo Thomas
- Atlanta - Alan Alda and Marlo Thomas
- Grandma - Diana Sands
- Girl Land - Jack Cassidy and Shirley Jones
- Dudley Pippin And His No-Friend - Bobby Morse and Marlo Thomas
- Glad To Have A Friend Like You - Marlo Thomas
- Free To Be...You And Me - The New Seekers
Amazon.com
There are thousands upon thousands of children's albums out there, but the one that quietly left its mark with more '70s children than perhaps any other album was this disc. Free to Be...You and Me was a pet project of proud feminist Marlo Thomas (a.k.a. "That Girl"), and it was born--according to the liner notes--by the desire to provide her niece with music "to celebrate who she was and who she could be." Harry Belafonte sings "Parents Are People," ex-football great Rosie Grier offers an incredible, touching melody titled "It's All Right to Cry," and Diana Ross waxes future-positive on "When We Grow Up." A great hour of brain food for young--and not-so-young--children. --Denise SheppardCustomer Reviews:
Okay but definately 70's sounding.......2007-07-10
Oldie but a Goodie.......2007-06-27
I still remember all the words.......2007-05-24
Still fresh and new.......2007-05-12
Still great after all these years! .......2007-03-14
My sister and I loved it as kids and though it's a teeny bit dated, the messages are sound, clear, and still 'work' today. The comedy is great for all ages(who can beat Mel Brooks and Alan Alda?)
So, my review says: get it! Listen ofen! And give it to someone you love!
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Dressed Up As Life
Sick Puppies Manufacturer: Virgin Records Us ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000NJL502 Release Date: 2007-04-03 |
Tracks:
- My World
- Pitiful
- Cancer
- What Are You Looking For
- Deliverance
- All The Same
- Too Many Words
- Howard's Tale
- Asshole Father
- Issues
- Anywhere But Here
- The Bottom
Customer Reviews:
Wonderful.......2007-06-28
a little story of the little puppies who could........2007-05-19
i've been into the pups since they we're discovered on Triple J with the song nothing really matters. (JJJ is OZ's largest and best youth radio station.) that first album and the follow up EP 'FLY' are both awesome and ironically no longer in print which is a shame. although since i own original copies of both means they are probly worth alot now that the puppies have been shot to stardom thanks to youtube and a little song called 'all the same'.
anyway that earlier work was brilliantly layered songwriting. it was alot more angrier and beautiful than D.U.A.L but completely ignored and unpopular. this was mainly due to the bands sound being to heavy and full of swearing - a big no-no for commercial radio (case in point google the lyrics for 'rock kids')
they were soon dropped by the label and fell into obscurity. i genuinly thought it would be the last of the pups but i heard rumours they had moved to LA to colaborate with muso's. several years later a free hugs campaign filmed by singer/guitarist shimon to the bands song 'all the same' hit you tube and was an overnight success.
this was my first taste of the sick puppies new songs and sound which was completely noticible straight away to me. i want to make it clear that i really like the bands new album (hence the 4 stars) and am excited this little aussie 3 piece could crack the hard international market. and all they had to do was keep the same great songwriting, just tone down the language and up the ballads. the lyrics in D.U.A.L are ok but some are lame and slightly emo (i'm sure gerard way could of written the lyrics for pitiful.) regardless this album has some great songs and is completely solid, personal favourites include my world, what are you looking for, all the same, too many words and cancer.
anyway congratulations sick puppies, i'm proud. and cheers 4 reading.
More Sick Puppies!.......2007-05-18
Not a bad buy..........2007-05-16
Great music with good songwriting!.......2007-05-13
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The Köln Concert
Keith Jarrett Manufacturer: Ecm Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000262WI Release Date: 1999-11-16 |
Tracks:
- Part I
- Part II a
- Part II b
- Part II c
Amazon.com essential recording
A musical chameleon, pianist Keith Jarrett was at his finest when he recorded these sustained solo improvisations in a German concert hall in 1975, the first lasting 26 minutes, the second 40. Melodies and rhythmic figures arise fluidly from his fingers as he moves from one idea to another, while his strong left hand is often used for repeated motifs that generate a rolling hypnotic power. This couples with strongly consonant harmonies to impart the flavor of gospel music at times, dance musics and Debussy at others. Above all, it's Jarrett's ability to knit all of his moods and wanderings into an almost seamless tapestry of warm and tuneful ideas that gives this music its enduring appeal. --Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
this is really cheesy music..........2007-06-23
One of my favorites EVER!.......2007-04-23
Good music!.......2007-03-19
Ageless Sounds.......2007-02-18
All surface.......2007-01-15
Average customer rating:
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The Very Best of John Coltrane
John Coltrane Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000046PVI Release Date: 2000-02-15 |
Tracks:
- Giant Steps
- Cousin Mary
- Naima
- Like Sonny
- My Shining Hour
- My Favorite Things
- Central Park West
- Summertime
- Mr. Syms
- Equinox
- Body And Soul
Amazon.com
With his inexhaustible technique, trademark sound, and limitless imagination, tenor and soprano saxophonist John Coltrane was one of jazz's most dominant musicians. This collection covers his important Atlantic Records sessions recorded from 1959 to 1960 (chronicled in their entirety on Heavyweight Champion). The tunes signal an important transitional phase from Trane's stints with Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk to his emergence as a leader in his own right. "Giant Steps" "Naima," and "Cousin Mary"--featuring pianist Tommy Flanagan and drummer Art Taylor--crystallized Trane's supersonic "sheets of sound" style. "Like Sonny," an Afro-Latin dedication to his friend and contemporary Sonny Rollins with Wynton Kelly on piano, reveals Trane's stylistic debts to Charlie Parker and Coleman Hawkins. His historic renditions of "My Shining Hour," "Body and Soul," "Summertime," and "My Favorite Things" highlight Coltrane's ability to remake a song into his own image, as well as introduce his influential sound on the soprano sax. These landmark recordings show the development of Coltrane's "great" quartet as well as forecast his iconoclastic excursions into the outer limits of rhythm and tonality, which grew during until his death in 1967. --Eugene Holley, Jr.Customer Reviews:
Actually, this is pretty good.......2007-07-17
"Giant Steps" "Equinox" and "My Favorite Things" are enough for 10 stars alone........2007-05-18
The Very Best of John Coltrane -- Not To Be Missed!.......2007-01-03
Each of these standout songs is different and unique among the other songs on the recording, but it is to these I want to draw your attention as those that captured mine when I listened to the CD.
I am a guitarist who wants to learn Coltrane's interval and melodic technique, but I am always perplexed by his ever changing exploration of the note, in and around the note, wrenching it of its juice like a squeezed lemon, until there is no more; and then Coltrane changes his melodic structure and has another entire lemon to work with.
Please don't misunderstand this illustration as to make it sound like his music is sour like the lemon, although that's what you may be thinking!
Coltrane's unique use of intervals has always what has been his hallmark, some slow and bluesy, others as in the changes of "Giant Steps" blindingly fast and complex.
There are other songs I would have liked to have seen appear on this recording, but as advertised as "The Very Best of John Coltrane", this CD doesn't fall that short.
If you are new to Coltrane's work, this is an excellent place to start. I gave it 4 out of 5 stars because of the fact there should be other more recognizable songs of his on this recording, and I would have gladly paid for a 2-CD set if "The Very Best of John Coltrane" delved more into his vast repertiore of work.
All that being said, the songs on "The Very Best of John Coltrane" will not disappoint or denegrate the recording in its entirety. Again, the CD should be taken for its whole, not just the standout songs I mentioned above.
Classic Jazz enthusiasts already know Coltrane, and this is a welcome addition to my collection, almost always in rotation on my CD carousel if not uploaded to my iTunes.
All The High Points of the Atlantic Years.......2006-12-24
You know, listening to Coltrane is actually very much like riding on a real train. The stuff on this CD could be compared to having left the station a few miles back but not yet up to full speed. Things start picking up around the time that "Live at the Village Vanguard" was released, and full speed is achieved right at and immediately after "A Love Supreme". Some people don't care for the train ride at full speed. I love it. It's really quite amazing to compare the music on this CD to a release such as Sun Ship (December 1966) and realize there is only about 7 years time that passed between these sessions. So this is really a great place to start if you've been hearing Coltrane's name (from your musician friends perhaps) and don't know where to start.
Buy
Outstanding Compilation.......2006-11-08
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Ken Burns's Jazz: The Story of American Music
Various Artists Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000050HVG Release Date: 2000-11-14 |
Tracks:
- Star Dust - Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra
- Soon One Mornin' (Death Come A-Creepin' in My Room0 - Mississippi
- Memphis Blues - Lieut. Jim Europe's 369th Infantry ("Hell Fighters") Band
- Livery Stable Blues - The Original Dixieland Jazz Band
- Charleston - James P. Johnson
- Chimes Blues - King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band
- Back Water Blues - Bessie Smith
- The Pearls - Jelly Roll Morton
- Dead Man Blues - Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers
- Wild Cat Blues - Clarence Williams's Blue Five
- Cake Walkin' Babies (From Home) - Clarence Williams's Blue Five
- Sugar Foot Stomp - Fletcher Henderson & His Orchestra
- Heebie Jeebies - Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five
- Potato Head Blues - Louis Armstrong & His Hot Seven
- West End Blues - Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five
- The Mooche - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- East St. Louis Toodle-Oo - Duke Ellington & His Washingtonians
- Black Beauty - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- Mood Indigo - The Jungle Band
- There Ain't No Sweet Man (Worth The Salt Of My Tears) - Paul Whiteman & His Orchestra featuring Bix Beiderbecke
- Singin' The Blues - Frankie Trumbauer & His Orchestra featuring Bix Beiderbecke
- Riverboat Shuffle - Frankie Trumbauer & His Orchestra featuring Bix Beiderbecke
- Hotter Than 'Ell - Fletcher Henderson & His Orchestra
- I Got Rhythm - Ethel Waters
Tracks:
- It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- Echoes of Harlem - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- Moten Swing - Benny Moten's Kansas City Orchestra
- St. Louis blues - Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra
- Ain't Misbehavin' - Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra
- For Dancers Only - Jimmie Lunceford & His Orchestra
- King Porter Stomp - Benny goodman & His Orchestra
- Rose Room - The Benny Goodman Sextet
- Sing, Sing, Sing (With a Swing) - Benny Goodman Sextet
- Jumpin' at the Woodside - Count Basie & His Orchestra
- Sent for You Yesterday and Here You Come Today - Count Basie & His Orchestra
- Lester Leaps In - Count Basie's Kansas City Seven
- Oh, Lady, Be Good! - Jones-Smith Incorporated
- Without Your Love - Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra
- Strange Fruit - Billie Holiday
- God Bless the Child - Billie Holiday with Eddie Heywood & His Orchestra
- Three Little Words - Art Tatum
- Rebecca - Pete Johnson & "Big" Joe Turner
- Harlem Congo - Chick Webb & His Orchestra
- A-Tisket, A-Tasket - Chick Webb & His Orchestra featuring Ella Fitzgerald
- Shine - Django Reinhardt & Le Quartet du Hot Club de France
- Dear Old Southland - Noble Sissle & His Orchestra
Tracks:
- Body and Soul - Coleman Hawkins
- Cotton Tail - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- Take the 'A' Train - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- Begin the Beguine - Artie Shaw & His Orchestra
- In The Mood - Glenn Miller & His Orchestra
- Well, Git It! - Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra
- Solitude - Billie Holiday with Eddie Heywood & His Orchestra
- Drum Boogie - Gene Krupa & His Orchestra
- Salt Peanuts - Dizzy Gillespie & His All Star Quintet
- Groovin' High - Dizzy Gillespie Sextet
- Ko-ko - Charlie Parker's Re-Boppers
- Scrapple From the Apple - Charlie Parker Quintet
- Enbraceable You - Charlie Parker Quintet
- Get Happy - Bud Powell Trio
- Epistrophy - Thelonious Monk
- Straight, No Chaser - Thelonious Monk
- Manteca - Dizzy Gillespie & His Orchestra
- Moon Dreams - Miles Davis Nonet
- Just Friends - Charlie Parker
- Rockin' Chair - Louis Armstrong
- They Can't Take That Away From Me - Sarah Vaughan & Her Trio
- Walkin' Shoes - Chet Baker & Gerry Mulligan
- Fine and Mellow - Billie Holiday
Tracks:
- Doodlin' - Horace Silver & The Jazz Messengers
- I Get A Kick Out of You - Clifford Brown & Max Roach
- St. Thomas - Sonny Rollins
- Django - The Modern Jazz Quartet
- Take Five - The Dave Brubeck Quartet
- So What - Miles Davis Sextet
- Giant Steps - John Coltrane
- Rick Kick Shaw - Cecil Taylor Trio
- Chronology - Ornette Coleman
- Original Faubus Fables - Charles Mingus
- Acknowledgment - John Coltrane Quartet
Tracks:
- Hello, Dolly! - Louis Armstrong
- Desafinado - Stan Getz & Charlie Byrd
- In a Sentimental Mood - Duke Ellington & John Coltrane
- Tourist Point of View - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- E.S.P. - The Miles Davis Quintet
- Spanish Key (single version) - Miles Davis
- Birdland - Weather Report
- Mister Magic - Grover Washington, Jr
- Rockit - Herbie Hancock
- Un Ange en Danger - M.C. Solaar & Ron Carter
- Tanya - Dexter Gordon
- Soon All Will Know - Wynton Marsalis
- Death Letter - Cassandra Wilson
- Take The "A" Train - The Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra
Amazon.com
This five-CD box set soundtrack to filmmaker Ken Burns's 10-part, 19-hour documentary Jazz spans nearly a century of jazz styles, from the martial rhythms of James Reese Europe to the soul-jazz of Grover Washington Jr. It includes time-tested classics like Benny Goodman's 1938 classic, "Sing, Sing, Sing"; John Coltrane's chanting 1965 immortal track, "A Love Supreme"; Billie Holiday's blue-ember ballad, "God Bless the Child"; and Ella Fitzgerald peeling off "A-Tisket A-Tasket." Bebop is represented by Charlie Parker's orchestral bop version of "Just Friends"; Thelonious Monk's nocturnal calling card, "'Round Midnight"; and Dizzy Gillespie's "Salt Peanuts" and "Groovin' High."The jazz-instrumentalist-as-singer comes to life on Coleman Hawkins's "Body and Soul" and Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers' "Doodlin'." Clifford Brown and Max Roach's "I Get a Kick out of You" epitomizes the hard-bop era, while Miles Davis's "So What" stands as the modal masterpiece. The cool school is in session with Chet Baker and Gerry Mulligan dishing out "Walkin' Shoes," and the Modern Jazz Quartet's soulful elegy "Django" straddles all the above musical orbits. As for Django Reinhardt, he's featured on "Shine" with the justly famed Le Quartet du Hot Club de France.
Louis Armstrong's "West End Blues" and "Potato Head Blues" and Duke Ellington's rousing rendition of Billy Strayhorn's anthem, "Take the A Train," and his moody "Solitude" show why they are the Olympian masters of this art form--and the most frequently featured artists in the series. Although Ken Burns tries bringing the music up-to-date with Wynton Marsalis, Cassandra Wilson, and two jazz-hip-hop-influenced tracks--Herbie Hancock's robotic "Rockit" and the French-language "Un Aige en Danger" by MC Solaar and bass legend Ron Carter--there are significant holes here. After Cecil Taylor and Ornette Coleman, the avant-garde period from the late 1960s to the 1980s is lacking. And aside from the bossa nova hit "Desafinado," Latin jazz is also missing. It's a tough task summarizing jazz in five CDs, and Burns has given us a vibrant and vivid multicolored aural portrait of the music. --Eugene Holley Jr.
Customer Reviews:
A Good Selection, An Odd Accompaniment to the Documentary.......2007-04-25
Great Intro to Jazz.......2007-03-23
Ken Burn's Jazz CD.......2007-01-14
A must have.........2007-01-05
Good starter set for jazz beginners.......2006-02-22
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Harem
Sarah Brightman , and Frank Peterson Manufacturer: Angel Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00008W2QZ Release Date: 2003-06-10 |
Tracks:
- Harem
- What A Wonderful World
- It's A Beautiful Day
- What You Never Know
- The Journey Home
- Free
- Mysterious Days
- The War Is Over
- Misere Mei
- Beautiful
- Arabian Nights
- Stranger In Paradise
- Until The End Of Time
- You Take My Breathe Away
Amazon.com
If one's notion of "world music" promises a touch of the exotic and indigenous, often overlooked is the fact that the influence of western pop music has seeped into every corner of the globe, creating a hybrid that's often more than merely the sum of its influences. Theater vet Brightman steps into that pan-cultural hall of mirrors here, wedding her fascination with the music and rhythms of the "forbidden places" (the title's Arabic meaning) of the Middle East to her own oft ethereal vocal charms and rock-solid sense of drama. And if the diva's equally sound crossover sensibilities (and that of longtime producer Frank Peterson) sometimes mire it in familiar world-beat pastiche, Brightman's charmed muse manages some transcendent moments nonetheless. Her musical borrowings (Borodin for the title track; Puccini's *Madame Butterfly* for "It's a Beautiful Day") are as compelling as her choice of collaborators: classical violin star Nigel Kennedy and Iraqi vocalist Kadim Al Sahir add compelling touches to the weary timeliness of "The War is Over." The musical influences range from Europe across the Mediterranean and as far East as the Indian roots of "Bollywood" composer A.R. Rahman's "The Journey Home" and Brightman's own "You Take My Breath Away" to evocative recastings of the emblematic standards "Stranger in Paradise" and Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World," while ex-Killing Joke keyboardist Jaz Coleman provides the savory East-meets-West orchestrations that ensure Brightman's star turns the seamless foundations they deserve. --Jerry McCulleyAmazon.com
Sarah Brightman Photos
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More from Sarah Brightman
Time to Say Goodbye |
Diva: The Singles Collection |
Eden |
Diva: The Video Collection |
Live from Las Vegas |
La Luna (Live in Concert) |
Customer Reviews:
harem .......2007-05-28
New to Sarah Brightman.......2007-03-12
Stranger in Paradise - More Like Stranger in a Lost Cause.......2006-12-30
No voice like hers in the world.......2006-10-01
Brilliant Brightman, Her best CD........2006-09-18
Average customer rating: |
Sacred Ground
David Murray & Black Saint Quartet Manufacturer: Justin Time Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000PY50ZQ Release Date: 2007-06-26 |
Tracks:
- Sacred Ground
- Transitions
- Pierce City
- Banished
- Believe In Love
- Family Reunion
- The Prophet Of Doom
Album Description
"Sacred Ground" is a fascinating and important new recording that grew from David Murray's involvement in the acclaimed documentary film, Banished, directed by Marco Williams. Although it's virtually unknown, more than a dozen counties in the U.S. violently expelled thousands of families between the Civil War and the Great Depression. The film - and this recording - explores not only these historical facts, but also the legacy of these events in the communities and for the descendants of the families.
After exploring the themes of the film he'd been asked to score, Murray was inspired - indeed compelled - to dig deeper, and to compose further music. David Murray enlisted poet Ishmael Reed, one of today's pre-eminent African- American literary figures. Reed wrote two poems, performed here by the great Cassandra Wilson.
David chose to record this using his Black Saint Quartet - sometimes called Power Quartet, on the group's first outing since the passing of the great John Hicks last year. Logically then, David enlisted pianist Lafayette Gilchrist, informally a Hicks student and admirer, and on drums the great Andrew Cyrille. Bassist Ray Drummond completes this first class group.
Average customer rating:
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Free Yourself
Fantasia Barrino Manufacturer: J-Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00065BYAY Release Date: 2004-11-23 |
Tracks:
- Ain't Gonna Beg
- Free Yourself
- Truth Is
- Selfish
- Summertime
- Baby Mama
- Got Me Waiting
- It's All Good
- You Were Always On My Mind
- Good Lovin
- Don't Act Right
- This Is Me
- I Believe
Amazon.com
Few would accuse Fantasia of a reluctance to abide by the wisdom that what you've got, you should flaunt, and the vocal gusto she slathers over her full-length debut gets partial credit for earning--and keeping--your attention. To a greater extent, though, the high-wattage help heaped over the Idol 3 champ and Patti LaBelle-sound-alike makes the disc dazzle. In addition to pitch-ins from Missy Elliott, who produced and co-wrote three tracks and busts out a two-snaps-up rhyme on "Selfish (I Want U 2 Myself)," Jazze Pha duets on the ultra-mod "Don't Act Right" and Jermaine Dupri wrote and produced the smolderer "Got Me Waiting." Surprisingly, though, it's not those tracks or even the Idol-propelled cover of the Gershwins' "Summertime" that will stick with listeners most. Instead, first single "Truth Is," a sweet, old-school R&B lament directed toward a lost love, and "Baby Mama," a spirited shout-out to hard-working single mothers, snare standout status with their from-the-gut authenticity. Keeping it real is what won Fantasia the hearts of millions on TV, and despite Free Yourself's likable slickness, it convinces that--hot commodity or no--she's not about to forget it. -Tammy La GorceCustomer Reviews:
Total Garbage.......2007-02-27
c'mon now.......2007-02-16
Nice little debut.......2007-01-02
were killing the competiion on Amercian Idol in 2004 it was almost a given that an female R&B singer would take the crown that year. Well Fantasia ended up taking the crown and lived up to her promise on her first CD. Her first single Truth Is was an excllent R&B single and the song Baby Mama was catchy and fun.
Could not get past Baby Mama .......2006-12-29
I didnt know the chipmunks won American Idol.......2006-12-22
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