Japanese reissue of 1990 album has been pressed onto a resized 12cm single CD. Sony. 2005.
Be Wanabee,Toshinobu Kubota,Sony,Japanese,World Music
Average customer rating:
|
It Won't Be Soon Before Long
Maroon 5 Manufacturer: A&M / Octone Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000P2A256 Release Date: 2007-05-22 |
Tracks:
- If I Never See Your Face Again
- Makes Me Wonder
- Little of Your Time
- Wake Up Call
- Won't Go Home Without You
- Nothing Lasts Forever
- Can't Stop
- Goodnight Goodnight
- Not Falling Apart
- Kiwi
- Better That We Break
- Back At Your Door
Amazon.com
Sometimes it's O.K.--even important--to put aside your reluctance to embrace artists who make teenage girls scream. It happened in 2006, when Justin Timberlake scraped the sludge off pop and left something shiny behind, and it's happening again in 2007 with Maroon 5. It Won't Be Soon Before Long, the L.A. band's sophomore studio disc, rode in on a crest of hype and crumpled expectations--fan reports had it that Adam Levine & Co. scrapped their signature pop-soul sound for something harder and darker. Not so. Shades of Prince, Hall & Oates, and Sting still color the Maroon sound (check out the spectacularly fizzy "Little of Your Time," as well as the first single, "Makes Me Wonder," a song catchier than fire), but they're made ever fainter here by the clamping down of five guys on what is essentially the most distinctive pop sound to emerge from a single band since the Bee Gees squealed into the mid-'70s. It Won't Be Soon squares hip-hop sensibilities ("Wake Up Call") with rock ones ("If I Never See Your Face Again") and stormy moods ("Can't Stop") with bittersweet ballads ("Better That We Break"). It's a disc destined to defy detractors and go on to greatness, elevating the credibility of teenage girls for years to come. --Tammy La GorceAmazon.com
Global neo-soul rock superstars Maroon 5 are back with their much-anticipated sophomore album, It Won't Be Soon Before Long. The follow-up to the 10x platinum, Grammy-winning Songs About Jane will be "sexier and stronger," according to frontman Adam Levine, who looked to '80s icons such as Prince, Michael Jackson, and Talking Heads for inspiration. Recorded at home in Los Angeles with producers Mike Elizondo (Fiona Apple, Eminem), Mark "Spike" Stent (Bjork, Keane, Gwen Stefani), Mark Endert (Madonna, Fiona Apple), and Eric Valentine (Queens of the Stone Age, Nickel Creek), the album promises to be a louder take on the pop sounds of their first effort. "It's definitely aggressive, upbeat and pounding," says Levine.
More Maroon 5
Songs About Jane |
Live Friday the 13th |
1.22.03.Acoustic |
![]() |
![]() |
||
![]() |
![]() |
Customer Reviews:
It Won't Be Soon Before Long - Absolutely No Songs About Jane.......2007-07-15
Musically speaking, this record is way much better than "Songs About Jane" in my opinion. It is clear that songs are now arranged and played in a more careful and sophisticated way. My picks are: "Nothing Lasts Forever", "Can't Stop", "Not Falling Apart" and "Back at Your Door". My guess is that if you hear at least these four tracks, you will notice a better and more mature Maroon 5, going to the right way and making their evolution.
buy it.......2007-07-14
even the songs you've never heard before you will love
if you like songs about jane, you'll like this, too
i have it in my car cd player right now
The Wait is Over.......2007-07-13
Another good one!.......2007-07-09
Not as catchy as Songs About Jane.......2007-07-09
Average customer rating:
|
The Else
They Might Be Giants Manufacturer: Idlewild/Zoe Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000QTCY5O Release Date: 2007-07-10 |
Tracks:
- I'm Impressed
- Take Out the Trash
- Upside Down Frown
- Climbing the Walls
- Careful What You Pack
- The Cap'M
- With the Dark
- The Shadow Government
- Bee of the Bird of the Month
- Withered Hope
- Countrecoup
- Feign Amnesia
- The Mesopotamians
Amazon.com
Twenty years after their debut album introduced a well-read duo with a peculiar wit and a gift for contagious melodies, They Might Be Giants--a.k.a. John Linnell and John Flansburgh--still come across as exhilarating and spanking fresh as the theme song to Comedy Central's Daily Show. (Oh yeah, that's them, too.) Fresh off the Giants' second children's record (2005's Here Come the ABCs), the New York twosome began a production alliance with L.A.'s Dust Brothers that resulted in The Else, another collection that ranks with any in their memorable discography. From the fast-tempo opener "I'm Impressed" through the '60s pop edge of "The Mesopotamians," endearing hooks reel you in just far enough for the humorous, often oddball lyrics to bury you. But several times the implications in the lyrics are all too real, such as the love undertones of "Contrecoup" and "Take Out the Trash," an uncannily catchy dump-your-boyfriend song that suggests "Once you get him out, tell him not to come back again." Contradictions like these never bother to disrupt the sequencing, but rather drive home what we already know about They Might Be Giants: they already are. --Scott HolterCustomer Reviews:
I'm NOT all that impressed..........2007-07-16
we're the mesopotamians!.......2007-07-14
It doesn't seem as good as the reviews suggest at first. In fact, my first listen ended with disappointment, despite the quality of the closing track (the utterly brilliant "Mesopotamians"). For the first time in their long and varied career, They have brought out an album that could actually be classified as "a grower." And seriously, these songs begin to connect like nothing else after awhile, and eventually the entire album experience is revealed to be as cohesive as "Factory Showroom," their only other LP to be considered cohesive to begin with.
Flansy surprised me with this record. It will be different for every listener/fan, but my favorite songs off this album are his, which has never been the case in the past. Especially in the past few years -- his work was either good or hokey beyond belief. But not this time, minus the rather meh "Take Out the Trash," which isn't that bad but is easily the worst cut on the album (a bit too Smashmouth for my tastes). "Careful What You Pack" is so unlike TMBG it's insane -- and I'm not exaggerating when I say it could have been done by The Flaming Lips or a conservative Radiohead. "With the Dark" is genius, something that recalls their past unlike any other song on the record. It's a mini opera-like suite, with genre hopping every 30 seconds or so. "The Shadow Government" and "Feign Amnesia" are maybe slightly geeky, but genuinely fun rockers, with "Goverment" especially being "John Henry" worthy.
Linnell doesn't disappoint, though. "I'm Impressed" does electronic-rock (or whatever) great, and the already underrated "Upside Down Frown" is so pretty and adorable, not to mention it sounds like it could have been on the first two albums. "The Cap'm" is a convincing rocker, with some funny lyrics as well ("did you say/...what I think you just said/my hat looks good on me?/I agree!"). Aforementioned "Mesopotamians" is easily thier best closer since, well, "The Bells Are Ringing," and also one of their best overall.
Don't listen to Pitchfork and other negative-ish reviews; this album is amazingly consistent and works more well than it probably should. Although not as good as thier first five albums, it still is much better than their last few albums. Pick this one up.
Note: the bonus CD is strictly for hardcore fans. Most of the songs are average, with a couple that are great and a few that are beyond terrible. It's pretty funny that the best moment on the entire disc is when "Metal Detector" (a live version) comes on.
Sponge-worthy Else.......2007-07-13
I'm never disappointed by TMBG's albums and the Else is no exception. The mood is set right off the top with I'm Impressed and continues through The Mesopotamians. I do think there are standout songs on this album, especially Withered Hope, which I found myself listening to on endless repeat in the car yesterday. The arrangements on this album both harken back to other TMBG music and look forward. I've seen many, many concerts by the Giants and can't wait to hear Withered Hope and Cap'n live!
Listen to this album...or ELSE!.......2007-07-13
The Else, the 12th official release from They Might Be Giants, does not disappoint. The CD offers a total of 13 tracks and there's not a throw-away in the bunch. Obviously there are some songs that are better than others, but all are entertaining and witty. (And I'm sure your favorites will probably be different from mine...that's one of the joys of TMBG - there ability to appeal to various listeners in different ways.)
This album is a worthy addition to the TMBG canon. In the pre-release publicity for The Else, John Flansburg (who, along with John Linnell, forms the core of the band) said that "We wanted to be sure this was an album that was our best effort from beginning to end and I am very excited to report I believe we've actually done it!" I certainly agree with his assessment.
Some of the best songs on the disc are "The Mesopotamians," "The Cap'm," "Upside Down Frown," "Feign Amnesia," and the odd and quirky "Bee of the Bird of the Moth." However, without question, my personal favorite moment is the new extended version of "Contrecoup."
The demo version of Contrecoup has been floating around since 2005 and has appeared on the TMBG podcast as well as the TMBG Clock Radio (an Adobe Flash-powered application, originally released on tmbg.com in 2003, that streams MP3s from tmbg.com). The song had its origins in a challenge issued to John Linnell on WNYC's "The Next Big Thing" radio show to create a song using the almost-forgotten words contrecoup, craniosophic, and limerent.
I loved the original demo, but now the song has truly been "finished" with a much larger band sound. The length of the song has doubled from from just over a minute and a half to a full 3 minutes and 11 seconds. If you ever needed proof that John Linnell is a lyrical genius, then this song should do the trick.
And if all of this wan't already enough to make you want to add The Else to your CD collection, the first printing also contains an additional disc with 23 extra songs on it! The bonus disc, called Cast Your Pod to the Wind, is primarily made up of songs that had been previously featured on a TMBG podcast. In fact, 21 of the 23 songs were previously released through via podcast, including the title track. Two songs, "I'm Your Boyfriend Now" and "We Live In A Dump" have been entirely re-recorded for the disc, while many others have been remixed, remastered and partially re-recorded for release on CD.
Admittedly, some of the songs on the bonus disc aren't fantastic (I absolutely HATE "The Mexican Drill"). However, it is a fantastic bonus with some really enjoyable moments, like "We Live In A Dump," "Microphone," and "Metal Detector." The full track listing is as follows:
1. Put Your Hand On The Computer (1:57)
2. I'm Your Boyfriend Now (2:40)
3. Why Did You Grow A Beard? (1:08)
4. We Live In A Dump (1:40)
5. Brain Problem Situation (2:55)
6. Sketchy Galore (2:21)
7. Microphone (2:04)
8. Vestibule (1:58)
9. Greasy Kid Stuff (1:40)
10. Metal Detector (Live) (3:42)
11. Employee Of The Month (1:24)
12. Homunculus (2:15)
13. No Plan B (Live) (1:40)
14. Morgan In The Morning ID (1:06)
15. Kendra McCormick (0:51)
16. Yeah, The Deranged Millionaire (1:23)
17. My Other Phone Is A Boom Car (0:28)
18. I Hear A New World (2:09)
19. (She Was A) Hotel Detective In The Future (2:04)
20. Haunted Floating Eye (1:24)
21. Scott Bower (1:23)
22. The Mexican Drill (1:10)
23. Cast Your Pod To The Wind (1:25)
The Else (and the bonus disc) will ensure that your frown remains upside down! You won't regret buying this release!
A Great Album.......2007-07-11
I've listened to it in its entirety a few times now and I still feel that it's a strong album. Very interesting arrangements and especially strong guitar work. As the album progresses, a fair amount of horns work their way into the mix, leaving me wanting to compare this with John Henry. The songwriting strikes me as similar to that album, as well.
The bonus disc, only to be included with the first pressing but sure to be released on its own in due time, collects 23 unreleased tracks, many of which seem album-worthy. Which leads me to one complaint, if you can call it that: The Else, with it's thirteen tracks, is too short, a bit too one-sided. Had a few of the bonus songs been incorporated into the album, The Else would have been classic. I get the feeling that They Might Be Giants are playing it a little too safe musically. Their artwork and overall presentation is at an all-time high (this album and The Spine both boast incredible, eye-catching art), but one of the things I've always loved about the band is that they seem willing to toss a weird little vignette or a strange little song about nothing in particular onto an album, whereas most bands generally save these for the archives or a bonus disc, or never release them at all.
I suppose I shouldn't complain. They Might Be Giants could have easily allowed the 23 fine tracks on the bonus disc to remain unheard outside of podcast or dial-a-song venues. I just wish they'd loosen up a bit, I guess.
But enough complaining...after all, like I said, The Else is a very good album. One that I'll be listening to regularly. I suppose it's just that, being used to getting twenty or so songs for so long, thirteen is kind of a disappointment. I thought the same thing when Factory Showroom came out. But I still listen to that album; I still think it's great. It doesn't bother me anymore that it's relatively short. I'll feel the same way about The Else someday soon. In the meantime, I'll just enjoy it for what it is. They Might Be Giants' 12th Album.
Average customer rating:
|
Let It Be
The Beatles Manufacturer: Capitol ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002UB6 Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Two Of Us
- Dig A Pony
- Across The Universe
- I Me Mine
- Dig It
- Let It Be
- Maggie Mae
- I've Got A Feeling
- One After 909
- The Long And Winding Road
- For You Blue
- Get Back
Amazon.com
Sloppy in conception, and even sometimes in the playing, Let It Be often gets a bad rap. Unfairly, as it's often as charming, well written, and (oh yeah) rocking as the Beatles' "better" albums; it's also more outright fun than Abbey Road, the masterpiece it followed into the stores. With Lennon and McCartney working together on the perfect "I've Got a Feeling," "Two of Us," and "Dig a Pony," it's hard to believe these guys were about to implode. --Rickey WrightCustomer Reviews:
I'M TIRED, SO TIRED...........2007-07-12
The Convoluted End.......2007-07-08
Overall, though, Let It Be really does little to tarnish the Beatles' reputation. There are small pleasures here that stand the test of time better than some of the Beatles' more grandiose efforts. "Two of Us" and "Get Back" can proudly take their place among the best of Lennon-McCartney, and even the overproduced "Across the Universe" and "The Long and Winding Road" still have a haunting melodic beauty.
And the Beatles, being the Beatles, didn't leave this without an odd wrinkle or two in the backstory. For one thing, this is the album for which the final Beatles recording sessions were conducted. Absent John, the rest of the group convened sometime after Abbey Road was put to bed to record George's "I Me Mine", which was featured in the Let It Be film, but only in rough form. They also put some finishing touches to the title track. These sessions were conducted in January 1970, which gave the Beatles the barest toehold as a working group in the new decade. The initial release of the album also reportedly featured a book of photos that one commentator described over thirty years ago as "useless", though I've never seen that book and would very much like to, if only to say I did.
And there is this: the album is entirely free of even the barest hint of the sometimes painful tension on display in the film. I'm not sure what that means, except that they obviously had moments even at this nadir when they could rally and make the magic happen.
This Album gets such a bad rep.......2007-07-05
Let It Be.......2007-06-08
UN ALBUM MUY TRISTE..........2007-05-07
Average customer rating:
|
Here Come the ABCs [CD/DVD Combo]
They Might Be Giants Manufacturer: Disney ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000BEZPSC Release Date: 2005-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Here Come The ABC's
- Alphabet Of Nations
- E Eats Everything
- Flying V
- Q U
- Gor For G!
- Pictures Of Pandas Painting
- D & W
- Fake - Believe
- Can You Find It?
- The Vowle Family
- Letter / Not A Letter
- Alphabet Lost And Found
- I C U
- Letter DHapes
- Who Put The Alphabet In Alphabetical Order
- Rolling O
- L M N O
- C Is For Conifers
- Fake Believe (Type B)
- D Is For Drums
- Z Y X
- Goodnight My Friends
- Clap Your Hands
- Here In Higglytown (Theme To Disney's Higglytown Hero's)
- Hovering Sombrero '05
- I Never Go To Work
Amazon.com
No stranger to the realm of children's records, They Might Be Giants have seen success with their CD No! and the book-and-CD combo Bed, Bed, Bed. Their latest CD, Here Come the ABCs, offers up 25 alphabetically themed songs. However, as is their charming way, the two Johns (Flansburgh and Linnell), use the letters as merely the connective tissue, allowing them to pursuit intriguing flights of fancy that consider everything from the relative power of letters and sounds to animal hijinks. Just as they've always done, there are wistful ballads and high octane rockers. TMBG have always been a family-friendly band, and this disc works just fine for adult fans, who can rightfully consider this simply their newest release. --David GreenbergerCustomer Reviews:
Fun for Kids and their Grown-ups!.......2007-06-10
My daughter loves it!!!!.......2007-05-30
my little one loves this DVD!.......2007-05-04
We both love it.......2007-04-18
Fun for kids and adults.......2007-04-15
Average customer rating:
|
Something to Be
Rob Thomas Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0007TKHHK Release Date: 2005-04-19 |
Tracks:
- This Is How A Heart Breaks
- Lonely No More
- Ever the Same
- I Am An Illusion
- When the Heartache Ends
- Something to Be
- All That I Am
- Problem Girl
- Fallin' To Pieces
- My My My
- Streetcorner Symphony
- Now Comes The Night
Amazon.com
It's common knowledge that solo albums are simply an excuse for a frustrated band member to indulge their experimental sides and Rob Thomas, singer for decidedly M.O.R. multiplatinum rockers Matchbox Twenty is not one to pass on the opportunity. Having already explored the classic rock thing through his collaborations with Mick Jagger and Santana, Thomas goes the other way here with results that are unexpected, and, sometimes totally unbelievable. He veers from modern R&B on the Justin Timberlake-aping "Lonely No More" to vintage prog-rock in "All That I Am," touching on all points in between. There are a few nods to the Matchbox canon with "Ever the Same" and "This Is How a Heart Breaks" but, as the title suggests, this is an album about finding himself. For the moment, Thomas is still searching. The DualDisc portion features 5.1 surround sound, a 20-minute documentary on the making of the album by filmmaker Gillian Grisman, plus the holiday tune, "Christmas in New York." --Aidin VaziriAlbum Description
As the lead singer to the multi-platinum group matchbox 20, Rob Thomas penned a remarkable string of chart-topping hits. Rob has also collaborated with a select list of artists-most notably Santana, for whom he wrote and sang the smash pop single, "Smooth," which earned Thomas three Grammy Awards.Customer Reviews:
Too experimental for my taste.......2007-07-04
A must have for any Rob Thomas Fan.......2007-04-10
Something to Be is excellent.......2007-04-02
Great CD .......2007-02-15
Profound Messages.......2007-01-13
Average customer rating:
|
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!
Average customer rating:
|
It Had to Be You... The Great American Songbook
Rod Stewart Manufacturer: J-Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006JL4J Release Date: 2002-10-22 |
Tracks:
- You Go To My Head (feat Dave Koz)
- They Can't Take That Away From Me (feat Arturo Sandoval)
- The Way You Look Tonight
- It Had to Be You (feat Michael Brecker)
- That Old Feeling (feat Arturo Sandoval)
- These Foolish Things (feat Dave Koz)
- The Very Thought of You
- Moonglow (feat Arturo Sandoval)
- I'll Be Seeing You
- Everytime We Say Goodbye (feat Dave Koz)
- The Nearness of You
- For All We Know
- We'll Be Together Again
- That's All
Amazon.com
Rod Stewart's mellowing years have neatly coincided with a commitment to smart ballad choices and a generally warmer musical persona. Rod the Mod liberated at last? Like many a pop singer, Stewart returns here to what's become generally known as the Great American Songbook, that evergreen body of mid-20th century songcraft that continues to inspire singers across oceans and generations. It's said that Stewart has been vocalizing many of these songs in private for years, and given the warm, human scale of most of the performances here, it's not hard to believe. Producer Phil Ramone's spare, unobtrusive arrangements inspire the singer to some of his most subtle and rewarding performances in years. Stewart's slightly weary vocal tack handsomely suggests the smoke, booze, and aching heart that lie at the best of these songs. Such back-to-the-future efforts can often sound like a last career gasp; here, they seem a refreshing breath of fresh air. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Rod Stewart.......2007-06-28
~ Rod Stewart
Given as gift to my 73 yr old aunt.
She requested it!
Another Great CD.......2007-06-02
Save Your Money!.......2007-05-15
a real disappointment.......2007-05-15
Rod Stewart, Crooner.......2007-05-07
Average customer rating:
|
Balls
Elizabeth Cook Manufacturer: 31 Tigers ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000OCZ9P0 Release Date: 2007-05-01 |
Tracks:
- Times Are Tough In Rock N' Roll
- Don't Go Borrowin' Trouble
- Sometimes It Takes Balls To Be A Woman
- Rest Your Weary Mind
- He Got No Heart
- Mama's Prayers
- Sunday Morning
- What Do I Do
- Down Girl
- Gonna Be
- Always Tomorrow
Amazon.com
Elizabeth Cook's cornbread-and-cracklings approach to modern country music isn't everybody's cup of homebrew. But her backwoods lineage is genuine: her daddy learned to play doghouse bass in a Georgia prison band, doing 11 years for running moonshine. And there are plucky moments--especially on "Sometimes It Takes Balls to Be a Woman," where she sounds like she could be the Coal Miner's Daughter's feminist grandkid. On this, Cook's fourth album, producer Rodney Crowell knows how to frame her as both authentic and hip, bringing alt-country prince Bobby Bare Jr. on board for the affecting mountain love song "Rest Your Weary Mind," and elsewhere imbuing her original shuffles and ballads with chickin'-pickin' guitars, languid fiddle solos, and even a jew's harp on the hoedown-ish "Times Are Tough in Rock 'n' Roll" ("All my feelings, all my fears/Were confirmed with Britney Spears.") There's a surprise around every corner--"He Got No Heart" is a sassy throwback to Wanda Jackson, while "Mama's Prayers" evokes the threadbare innocence of Iris DeMent, and "What Do I Do" finds Cook's twangy soprano leaping into the honky-tonk stratosphere. But get ready for her cover of the Velvet Underground's "Sunday Morning," which she dang near makes her own. Then again, that's something you might expect from a girl with an affinity for vintage cocktail dresses who still insists on baiting her own hook. --Alanna NashCustomer Reviews:
how country music should be.......2007-07-08
Balls is a stellar album from an undervalued singer. All eleven tracks are fantastic and make for great car-ride play. Not only does Cook possess a sweet soprano voice similar to Alison Krauss, but great songwriting ability as well. On the opening track, "Times are Tough in Rock n' Roll," a bluegrass-flavored tune, Cooks makes her disapproval with the current state of pop music known loudly and clearly. "Sometimes It Takes Balls to Be a Woman" is a rousing feminist anthem with a rockabilly sound. "He Got No Heart" blasts a lover with the searing line: "I'd shoot him down if I knew where to aim."
Perhaps one day country radio will wake up and discover Elizabeth Cook is the real deal: a traditional country singer with soul, and a songwriter with much to say.
country music.......2007-06-12
Back To Country Basics.......2007-05-30
Cookin'.......2007-05-28
"Rest Your Weary Mind" is a meditation on helping her man decompress after a hard day of Life. Sung as a duet with Bobby Bare, Jr., Cook's refrains provide soothing balm to Bare's laments. Conway and Loretta never did it any better.
"Down Girl" is a snaphot of a melancholy friend's marital woes, and the stark production and quiet mood give it a lullaby feel. Beautiful.
"Gonna Be" and "Times Are Tough In Rock and Roll" are clever, light-hearted romps through the pleasures and pains of being on "the ladder", but only a rung or two up, detailing life on the road and at home for an indie artist.
"Momma's Prayers" reveals a sentiment Hallmark only wishes they could put into words.
Backed by roots rock guitar ace (and husband) Tim Carroll and the cream of Nashville's roots session players including guitar masters Kenny Vaughan and Richard Bennett, Cook's vocals are sure and plaintive, sassy and seductive. Producer Rodney Crowel kept a light touch on the proceedings, allowing the songs and the players to meet at the point of "just enough" - nothing here sounds like a demo or a New Country polished cliche.
This kind of real music is out there, despite the major labels best efforts to ignore it (see "Oh, Brother Where Art Thou?"). If you are just getting hip to EC, check out all of her albums. Now that Rolling Stone, CBS Sunday Morning, AT&T Blue Room, and Dwight Yoakam are on board, it might be too late to say "I knew her when...", but Cook is that rare new friend that sounds like an old friend. Make yourself at home, put this record on.
Great album.......2007-05-10
Average customer rating:
|
Be Here
Keith Urban Manufacturer: Capitol ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0002VEU62 Release Date: 2004-09-21 |
Tracks:
- Days Go By
- Better Life
- Making Memories Of Us
- God's Been Good To Me
- The Hard Way
- You're My Better Half
- I Could Fly
- Tonight I Wanna Cry
- She's Gotta Be
- Nobody Drinks Alone
- Country Comfort
- Live To Love Another Day
- These Are The Days
Amazon.com
Australian-born Keith Urban, hot off the double-platinum success of his 2002 sophomore album, Golden Road, is kind of like contemporary country's Tom Cruise. The kid is just so unjustly talented, likeable, and good-looking that it's hard not to hate him. But such jealousy is apt to melt into begrudging admiration and affection after a quick listen to this third album. True, some of Urban's self-penned adolescent love laments and bright-eyed paeans to life in the slow lane do sound a bit callow and derivative. But, with his resolute tenor and his dazzling lead guitar work, he breathes real pain and passion into moving confessionals like Matraca Berg's "Nobody Drinks Alone," "Tonight I Wanna Cry" (a heart-rending ballad co-written by Urban), and a gentle Rodney Crowell gem called "Memories of Us." --Bob AllenAmazon.com
Keith Urban Photos
|
|
|
More from Keith Urban
Golden Road |
In the Ranch |
Keith Urban |
Customer Reviews:
One of my favorite cds!.......2007-06-09
I already loved those, but the rest of the album is great too! The Hard Way, Shes Gotta Be, etc. It's a great album and I defintely recommend it!
Classic Country Rock.......2007-05-03
very happy with my purchase!.......2007-04-11
Best country artist out there.......2007-03-17
Days Go By-a refreshing,upbeat song about living life now and not missing it.One of his best.
Better Life-my favorite of his.About him and his significant other finding better life and times in the future.Keeps its momentum throughout the whole song and he just goes all out.
Making Memories of Us-a nice soft song with really sweet lyrics.
God's Been Good to Me-Keith wrote this basically as a testimony of how God's blessings on him,which is especially special because of his past.
The Hard Way-takes a look at a relationship that's not working out,but nobody's walking away.I love the chorus.It's so sweet.
You're My Better Half-a catchy,upbeat song about the support and love he gets from his significant other.
I Could Fly-a "thank you" song to his love for making him feel alive.Interesting accompaniment.
Tonight I Wanna Cry-who hasn't heard this song?Heart breaking with the gorgeous piano and strings accompanying Keith's mellow voice.
She's Gotta Be-this is like a self beatdown for giving up this girl.I wasn't too impressed.
Nobody Drinks Alone-in (as far as I'm concerned)Keith's best guitar performance,he explains the empty feeling and guilt that comes with drinking.
Country Comfort-a song about home-grown country life.This was the only one in this album that I actually didn't like.The verses are pathetic.
Live to Love Another Day-an unusual breakup song in that it focuses on the positive-life goes on.
These Are the Days-basically a reprise of Days Go By.Starts off softly with profound and heart-felt statements about living life(The highest of flames becomes an ember)and gradually crescendos into Days Go By.
MAKING MEMORIES OF US.......2007-03-08
I WISH I HAD MET HER WHEN I WAS OF MARRYING AGE
Average customer rating:
|
No!
They Might Be Giants Manufacturer: Rounder / Umgd ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000068C97 Release Date: 2002-06-11 |
Tracks:
- Fibber Island
- Four of Two
- Robot Parade
- No!
- Where Do They Make Balloons?
- In The Middle, In The Middle, In The Middle
- Violin
- John Lee Supertaster
- The Edison Museum
- The House at the Top of the Tree
- Clap Your Hands
- I Am Not Your Broom
- Wake Up Call
- I Am a Grocery Bag
- Lazyhead and Sleepybones
- Bed Bed Bed
- Sleepwalkers
Amazon.com
Hitch up your I-Pods, egg-headed hipsters of the future: They Might Be Giants, the out-there band that files its sound under the banner of "Can't We All Just Get Along" is speaking your language. What they're saying is No!, but in a way that's weirdly welcoming, especially to anybody who's over 3 and has a hard drive. No!'s computer enhancements (animation, games, and a sing-along scroll bar) don't assign the strictly audio experience to the so-what pile, but at certain moments they seem necessary--how else are you supposed to decipher a song ("Violin") whose only words are "violin," "hippo," and the ticking off of fractional segments of George Washington's head? Of course, to try to make sense of the 17 tunes contained here may be to miss the point. While TMBG's lyrical and vocal hijinks can be off-putting to grownups prone to self-consciousness about not getting the joke, the generation No! takes aim at needs nothing in the way of validation. Thus the brilliance of baggage-free ditties like "Fibber Island," where the natives strum rubber guitars and sew buttons on cars, "John Lee Supertaster," a rock & roll fantasy following a hero with heightened senses of sweet and sour, and "I Am a Grocery Bag," detailing what's bumping around in brown paper after a trip to the market. With their triumph over the tube (TMBG took home a Grammy for the theme to Malcolm in the Middle and perform and wrote the intro to The Daily Show with Jon Stewart), frontmen John Linnell and John Flansburgh have already infiltrated the family market, sort of. No! finds the band bending to a level lots of other giants might overlook, but without cramping up. Given the right reach, They Could Be Kiddie Icons. -Tammy La GorceCustomer Reviews:
Is It True?.......2007-05-25
If this is true, it is terrible! If it is true, I will never ever buy any product of They Might Be Giants until Malcolm in the Middle is fully released!
Great gift for kids from 'cool' aunts and uncles.......2007-05-15
So I just bought them this CD (apparently one of the songs is on some Disney CHannel show?) and they LOVE it. They keep telling me how great it is and how grateful they are to have kids' music to listen to that isn't mind-numbing. I also got them "Toddler" by Sara Hickman, recommended by Zooglobble.com, which has some great reviews of kids music. And 'Good Ideas' by the Imagination Movers, and they like both those albums too, but they especially keep thanking me for this TMBG album.
So now I just have to find something that will help them get her to sleep... :)
Family values as only TMBG can present them.......2007-02-24
Former TMBG fan raising future TMBG fans!.......2007-01-23
Absolutely Love It.......2007-01-21
International Music:



