| 1. Arthur Cravan Was a Flor Fina |
| 2. Skatalan Logicofobism |
| 3. Sardana Dels Desemparats |
| 4. Recherche du Baron Corvo |
| 5. I Put a Barbara Steele on You |
| 6. Couteau Entre Les Dents |
| 7. Zigo-Zigo Della Moreneta |
| 8. Haiku de Tango |
| 9. That's Amore |
| 10. Like a Rolling Stone |
| 11. Johnny Guitar |
| 12. Also Sprach Ed Marimba |
| 13. Danse du Valseur Callipyge |
| 14. Sinistre Main Gauche |
| 15. Portrait d'Enric Avec Son Chapeau |
| 16. Promenade des Schizophrenes |
| 17. Souvenirs de Vernet-Les-Bains |
Traffic D'Abstractions,Pascal Comelade,EMI Int'l,Electronic,France,Int'l & World Music,Pop,World Music
Average customer rating:
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Traffic and Weather
Fountains of Wayne Manufacturer: Virgin Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000N4SKFK Release Date: 2007-04-03 |
Tracks:
- Someone To Love
- '92 Subaru
- Yolanda Hayes
- Traffic And Weather
- Fire In The Canyon
- This Better Be Good
- Revolving Dora
- Michael And Heather At The Baggage Claim
- Strapped For Cash
- I-95
- Hotel Majestic
- Planet Of Weed
- New Routine
- Seatbacks And Traytables
Amazon.com
Punctuated by 2005's sprawling compilation of B-sides and outtakes (Out-of-State Plates), a nearly four-year interval between fresh recordings has done nothing to tarnish Fountain of Wayne's pop-drenched songwriting tandem of Chris Collingswood and Adam Schlesinger. This 14-song bash is a late-'60s/early-'70s time warp that exploits every facet of the pop action plan (chiming guitars, infectious choruses, sinful harmonies) and begs for radio play. As usual, the band never takes itself too seriously, crafting melodies around a lively, vigorous cast of characters that practically come to life. There's a DMV attendant who can't shake our attention (the bouncy, piano-boosted "Yolanda Hayes"), an airport-stranded couple waiting impatiently for lost luggage (the folksy "Michael and Heather at the Baggage Claim"), and ex-lovers who blame it on the highway ("Fire in the Canyon," which explores the radio country-rock of the Eagles and America). They sing of an old-model Japanese car to get the girl ("'92 Subaru") and Renee seeing you "at the Gap in a baseball cap" ("This Better Be Good"), and any way they shake it, even after a too-long interruption, Collingswood and Schlesinger rarely miss the mark. --Scott HolterAlbum Description
A new, indelible cast of characters is inducted into the FOW pantheon of stars on Traffic And Weather: Yolanda Hayes, a sullen object of affection behind the glass at the Department Of Motor Vehicles; Seth Shapiro and Beth Mackenzie, two lonely, hardworking New Yorkers who cross paths - sort of - in "Someone To Love" (which features Hole/Smashing Pumpkins bassist Melissa Auf Der Maur singing backing vocals); the exhausted couple in "Michael and Heather At The Baggage Claim", dragging themselves onto an airport shuttle bus after a long trip; newscasters in heat in the album's title track, and many others. Hapless protagonists like the suspicious boyfriend of "This Better Be Good" and the hit-man target in "Strapped For Cash" are also classic Fountains Of Wayne narrators.Travel and transportation continue to figure heavily in the on-the-go world of FOW. The guy who buys himself a "'92 Subaru" is convinced that the right pimped-out ride is all he needs to get the girl; in the Beatlesque "i-95" a driver explores a rest area gift shop late at night, on the way to visit his loved one; we hear of "an eerie kind of sadness on the highway today" in the Gram Parsons-tinged "Fire In The Canyon" (featuring backing vocals by the Candy Butchers' Mike Viola, who was the voice of "That Thing You Do"). The misery of sitting in coach on a delayed flight is examined in the wistful waltz "Seatbacks And Traytables" (which contains a guest appearance on guitar by James Iha). And in the semi-epic "New Routine", we follow a series of characters who each randomly pick a new place to live, only to discover someone else there who can't wait to move away.
Customer Reviews:
More of the Same from Fountains of Wayne.......2007-07-15
The songs, taken individually, are pretty darn good. There's opener and single "Someone to Love," which features a slight curveball in the familiar FoW formula by including a hyped-up disco-beat chorus. Then there's "Yolanda Hayes," a bouncy song with sweet lyrics about the narrator's attempts to woo a DMV attendant. "This Better Be Good" is about the paranoia of a man who keeps hearing sketchy rumors of his girlfriend being seen with other men and in places she isn't supposed to be. I-95 is a wistful country song with lyrics about driving down the titular interstate to visit a long-distance lover. "Planet of Weed" is a one-joke song that's made to work with the ambient sounds in the background- various clinking and low talking. Plus the piano that fades in and out, playing bits completely unrelated to the main song, and the tambourine that keeps showing up that isn't on the beat at all. "New Routine" is a strong rocker that zooms around the world and tells several stories of disenchanted people making a change in their lives.
But then there's the rest of the songs. The band's penchant for pop-culture references verges on the out-of-control on this album; it'll be dated by 2008. "Someone to Love" works entirely on its music and chorus, the verses reference Coldplay, King of Queens, and The Late Show, and you're getting a bit aggravated on the first song. Then there's "'92 Subaru," a song whose narrator is a pompous jackass talking about how he is pimping out his car. I think it's supposed to be ironic, but the "irony" comes across about as well as Motley Crue's "Dr. Feelgood" came across as an anti-drug song (now they've got me making the references- dammit!). "Traffic and Weather" is a one-joke song that doesn't work, as a male news anchor spends the whole song telling his female co-anchor "we belong together, like traffic and weather." The effect is creepy, and not so funny. "Michael and Heather at the Baggage Claim" is a boring story of a couple who have lost their luggage, and it's supposed to be sweet, but it's piled on too thick and becomes cloying. And "Strapped for Cash" features another unlikeable narrator that's supposed to be funny, this time a loser who owes money to everyone.
Leaders Adam Schlesinger and Chris Collingwood are as strong as ever in the songwriting department. But since their style hasn't changed nearly at all over the past decade, the weaknesses in the lyrics keep this album from being a home run. Too bad the guys didn't write more stuff like the two great new songs off of their 2005 B-side collection, "Maureen" and "The Girl I Can't Forget." Despite the complaints, this is still a pretty good album. I'd give it a 3.5 on the Amazon scale, or a solid 7/10.
Fun fun fun!.......2007-06-08
Another 5 Star for Wayne.......2007-06-08
If you look up and down the reviews you will see a lot 5's from people who were probably fans since they first heard the band. It all comes down to taste, and this band seems to divide folks between love and hate.
If you didn't like them before, you probably won't like them now, but if you enjoyed Interstate Managers and other releases then you will appreciate this.
Traffic and Weather.......2007-06-07
Power-pop as a genre has become a guilty pleasure ever since Weezer fell out of favor, but Fountains of Wayne have remained true to their uncool sound from the beginning of their decade-long career. Grungy guitars, a crisp 4/4 beat, '50s-style piano, underdog stories--these are a few of Fountains of Wayne's favorite things. They're the sort of band that cites Burt Bacharach and Buddy Holly as influences (though they sound more like an updated version of Fastball than anything else) and believes that all anyone needs is love and a really big chorus. While so many current pop outfits worth their salt--Spoon, The Shins, Broken Social Scene, even Fall Out Boy--aim to challenge us somehow, Fountains of Wayne keep things simple. Way, way too simple.
It's all moderately catchy, too, but it never once goes beyond that. During my first pass through the Americana-lite "92 Subaru," I found myself tapping my feet to the punchy guitars and driving beat. The second pass was less satisfying, like birthday cake I didn't feel like eating, since one go was all it took to tell me everything I needed to know about "92 Subaru," lock, stock, and barrel. The third pass didn't even last two minutes. Traffic and Weather is assembly-line music, happy and jovial enough but unmistakably constructed in a factory or a lab rather than in the Williams College dorm where they all met. It screams "Ready for the radio!" like the worst emo and party rap, and while Fountains of Wayne would probably like us to pay attention, every song kept hitting the part of my brain that only half-listens and naturally tunes things out.
There's nothing wrong with the verse-chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus rubric to which they adhere so closely, and it made them an ideal pick to write the hit rock `n roll number from 1964/1996, "That Thing You Do" (from the movie of the same name, but you knew that). Yet four albums and a B-side compilation later and they're still serving up much of the same, so you'll excuse me for thinking it's getting a bit long in the tooth. Once in a while they'll stretch themselves, as on the polished country-rock of "Fire in the Canyon" or the Prince-Yes soundclash "Strapped for Cash," and it sort of works, though the effort is appreciated more than the results. A duck that dresses up like Shirley Temple is still a duck, but power-pop is an incredibly confining genre, so I suppose we'll take what we can get.
Worse, singer Adam Schlessinger is a mediocre storyteller with too many stories to tell. "Seth Shapiro got his law degree," the album begins, "he moved to Brooklyn from Schenectady, '93/Got some clients in the food industry." So? The road-beaten hopefuls in these songs get flattened by Schlessinger's propensity for dumb little details (do we need to know that one woman "takes the contacts out of her eyes" before bed?) without his humanizing them in a way that matters to us. The album reaches a lyrical nadir during "Michael and Heather at the Baggage Claim," which revolves around some lost "soft and brown" luggage. Lurking somewhere in there is a suburban yarn about people who love each other in the face of everyday hardships, but it requires too much guesswork. Throughout Traffic and Weather, we're left to plow through empty narratives whose meaning and raison d'être may be clear to the songwriters, but leave us scratching our heads at the starting line.
So in the end, we've got a standard-issue power-pop album that will give Fountains of Wayne devotees their next fix but will keep everyone else at arm's length, at least after the initial sugar high dissipates. Most aspects of Traffic and Weather are difficult to flat-out dislike, and the welding of rock and electronic instrumentation in many of these songs is actually pretty impressive. But if Fountains of Wayne make it all sound easy, it also seems like they didn't try very hard, especially for their first full-length effort in four years (roughly 120 music years). And if there's anything this album is not, it's a "grower," with the potential to bore, annoy, even anger those who find themselves on the wrong side of it for too long. Traffic and Weather, indeed.
Eclectic, surreal, polished, and infectious! :).......2007-06-04
Another reviewer mentioned influences like The Eagles and America. I'd say you can also hear echoes of Weezer (in "Someone to Love"), Robyn Hitchcock (in "Revolving Dora"), The Foo Fighters (in "'92 Subaru"), and Crowded House (listen especially to the title track and see if it doesn't make you think of Neil Finn). Fans of "Traffic and Weather" who are unfamiliar with any of these acts should check them out right away.
Altogether, it's a great record for fans of "Welcome Interstate Managers" (my only previous experience with the band). I'm not acquainted with any of FoW's earlier albums, but on the strength of their two most recent, I'll definitely be looking for more.
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Low Spark of High Heeled Boys
Traffic Manufacturer: Island ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000639A3 Release Date: 2002-03-19 |
Tracks:
- Hidden Treasure
- The Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys
- Light Up Or Leave Me Alone
- Rock & Roll Stew
- Many A Mile To Freedom
- Rainmaker
- Bonus Track - Rock & Roll Stew (Single Version)
Amazon.com
Despite not even charting in the band's native England, this album became a platinum-selling American hit on the basis of three enduring FM radio staples--the expansive, jazzy impressionism of the near-12 minute title track, and the more straightforward funk of the R&B charmers "Light Up or Leave Me Alone" and "Rock & Roll Stew." Those disparate tracks perfectly underscore Traffic's rich musical appeal and its restless, sometimes problematic creative and interpersonal relationships. With now thrice-departed Dave Mason out of the mix and percussionists Jim Gordon and Reebop Kwaku Baah participating in the studio for the first time, the band's innate musicality truly takes wing. Winwood's familiar vocal phrasings nearly take a backseat to his fluid, dramatic guitar work on "Rock & Roll Stew Roll" and "Many a Mile to Freedom," while the Tull-ish, folk-madrigal sensibilities of "Hidden Treasure" and "Rainmaker" are further punctuated by Chris Wood's deft flute and woodwind flourishes. Compared with the more organic John Barleycorn album, the contrast is all the more remarkable. While many contemporary bands were experimenting with various attempts at fusion, few achieved this collection's rock-jazz-folk-R&B range or level of often subtle sophistication. Digitally remastered, this edition also contains the six-minute-plus U.S. single version of "Rock & Roll Stew, Parts 1 & 2" as a bonus track. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Low Spark, high marks.......2007-05-18
Original Albums.......2007-05-11
one of the great things about 1971 was this album........2007-04-10
The Best of the Best.......2007-01-11
Hidden treasure.......2006-12-06
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John Barleycorn Must Die
Traffic Manufacturer: Island ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000059T1E Release Date: 2001-02-27 |
Tracks:
- Glad
- Freedom Rider
- Empty Pages
- I Just Want You To Know
- Stranger To Himself
- John Barleycorn
- Every Mothers Son
- Sittin' Here Thinkin' Of My Love
Amazon.com
Traffic's third studio album is also its third best, ranking below the band's superb second record (1968's Traffic) and its psychedelic debut (1968's Mr. Fantasy). The depth of those albums came from having two superior songwriters, Steve Winwood and Dave Mason; by John Barleycorn, Winwood was leading a trio that included Chris Wood on horns and Jim Capaldi on drums. Winwood now supplied guitar as well as keyboards, and songs such as "Glad" and "Freedom Rider" reflected the trio's fondness for instrumental jams. But the 1970 album is remembered most for the title tune, a traditional folk song blessed with one of the finest vocals of Winwood's long career. --John MilwardCustomer Reviews:
There Were Three Men Came Out of The West.......2007-06-17
"There were three men came out of the West,
Their fortunes for to try,
And these three men made a solemn vow:
John Barleycorn must die."
There are many versions of this folk ballad, some going back as far as 1465, and collected by Cecil Sharp from 1900 to 1910. There are between 100 and 140 versions, and in the one used by Traffic & Co., in spite of the solemn efforts of the three men to triumph over John Barleycorn, or distilled liquor, this was the outcome:
"And little Sir John and the nut-brown bowl,
And he's brandy in the glass;
And little Sir John and the nut-brown bowl,
Proved the strongest man at last."
Steve Winwood plays guitar on this, and Chris Wood plays flute. There are two vocalists, and I am guessing that it is Capaldi and Winwood. Not much percussion, and hard to sing when you're playing flute. There is a tambourine. Winwood seems to be deeply into this music, and the treatment sounds both ancient and modern.
"Glad" is an instrumental, and there is an extended jam, mostly piano and keyboards. Great drums, and a fat sax riff that is easy to play, but it sounds so cool, and ends on a very cool sounding trill. This is a great instrumental track, and the rest of the record veers between these two extremes. I really like this Traffic album for "Glad" and "John Barleycorn" but the rest ain't bad, either. Since those are my favorite Traffic songs, this is my favorite Traffic album.
"The huntsman, he can't hunt the fox,
Nor so loudly to blow his horn,
And the tinker he can't mend kettle nor pot,
Without a little Barleycorn."
A True Five Star.......2007-04-16
One of the finest albums of all time.......2007-03-04
The entire album is great--and covers an amazing amount of "musical territory." It would be on my short list of nominees for "greatest album of all time."
Let me also add that I was fortunate enough to see the briefly-reunited Traffic at Columbia, MD's Merriweather Post Pavilion (the year may have been 1994), not too long after the release of their much-underrated "Far From Home" - a fine album in its own right. It was a concert for the ages. Among his many other talents, Winwood is a superb guitarist.
incredible, indelible, inventive.......2007-02-16
it gets my vote as Traffic's best, but that's a tough call, for sure. what an amazing mix of
songs, styles, influences in a unique blend of music. never get tired of hearing the story
of poor John Barleycorn!
Great '60's Rock.......2007-01-11
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Traffic
Traffic Manufacturer: Island ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000059T1H Release Date: 2001-02-27 |
Tracks:
- You Can All Join In
- Pearly Queen
- Don't Be Sad
- Who Knows What Tomorrow May Bring
- Feelin' Alright
- Vagabond Virgin
- Forty Thousand Headmen
- Cryin' to be Heard
- No Time To Live
- Means To An End
- You Can All Join In - (mono single mix, bonus track)
- Feelin' Alright - (mono single mix, bonus track)
- Withering Tree - (stereo single mix, bonus track)
Amazon.com
Considering that Traffic couldn't seem to stay intact for more than a few months at a time, the band's work seems even more remarkable. Recorded in the summer of 1968 and released later that fall, Traffic, the band's sophomore release, stands as the outfit's high-water mark and one of the great rock albums of its time. Clearly, Dave Mason and Steve Winwood had completely different visions for the band, both musically and socially. In fact, Mason had already left the band at the year's beginning, only to return a few short months later. Mason liked to work alone and favored rooted folk-tinged material; Winwood saw the band as a communal affair and leaned toward progressive jazz-influenced music. Of course, the synthesis of these two approaches is what makes Traffic such a terrific album. There's not a weak moment across these 10 songs (augmented on this reissue with three mono single mixes). By fusing bits of country and folk, wisps of psychedelia, and elements of jazz and soul, the album managed to both presage and summarize the ambitious developments of rock music during its most creative era. --Marc GreilsamerCustomer Reviews:
Simply, a Must Have!.......2007-07-14
Traffic's second album.......2006-12-12
One hell of a record.......2006-11-04
Feelin' Alright.......2006-08-04
The greatest feat here was the lifting of the veil of psychedelia that permeated their first release. As much as I still love Mr. Fantasy, the cohesion that Traffic produced for their sophomore effort solidified their greatness, making this album their most accessible record. It manages to balance a myriad of musical genres from psychedelia ("Vagabond Virgin") to country ("You Can All Join In") to straight-up rock and roll ("Pearly Queen") to the folky/soft-rock stylings of Mason's solo work ("No Time To Live").
What makes "Traffic" even more impressive is the incredible use of layering to produce a rich, complex tapestry of music. Generally speaking, overdubbing tends to muddle and confuse music, but it was done in such a well calculated way here that it actually enhances the overall feel of each song. It's clear there was a focus here that didn't really manifest itself ever again. That's not to say that Traffic's later work was academic or pedestrian by comparison, but the effort to establish themselves as top-notch composers is most evident on this record.
Traffic's sound changed so much over their relatively short catalog that it is difficult to point newcomers to a particular album as a good starting point. In fact, this album may be the one most unlike any others with the possible exception of John Barleycorn.
I rate this album with five stars not so much because it's my favorite Traffic album (it's not), but because of the obvious clarity of purpose they put forth. There are no weak songs here. Every one could stand alone as a picture of brilliant song writing. This is absolutely a must have for any fan of the era and/or genre.
Traffic's Second Album Is Great.......2006-04-13
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Feelin' Alright: The Definitive Collection
Traffic Manufacturer: Island ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004C4QU Release Date: 2000-02-08 |
Tracks:
- Paper Sun
- Hole In My Shoe
- Heaven Is In Your Mind
- Dear Mr. Fantasy
- You Can All Join In
- Feelin' Alright?
- Pearly Queen
- Forty Thousand Headmen
- Shanghai Noodle Factory
- Glad
- Freedom Rider
- Empty Pages
- John Barleycorn
- Rock 'N' Roll Stew
- The Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys
Customer Reviews:
Mostly good.......2007-05-30
Great album.......2006-12-01
Great songs from 1968-71, but nothing from late 1971-74.......2006-08-02
THE DISC: (2000) 15 tracks clocking in at approximately 77 minutes. Included with the disc is a 14-page booklet containing song titles/credits, pictures of all album covers, what songs came from which albums, and 10 pages of pictures and history of the band and its members. Digitally remastered sound. Label - Island Records.
ALBUM REPRESENTATION: "Mr. Fantasy" (1968: 4 songs), "Traffic" (1968: 4), "Last Exit" (1969: 1), "John Barleycorn Must Die" (1970: 4), "The Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys" (1971: 2). *No songs from "Welcome To The Canteen" (1971-Live), "Shoot Out At The Fantasy Factory" (1973), "On The Road" (1973-Live), "Where The Eagles Fly" (1974).
COMMENTS: I got into Traffic way after the fact. However, I remember so many of these tunes from the classic rock radio stations growing up outside NYC. Especially the best songs on this disc... ""Dear Mr. Fantasy", "Glad", "Freedom Rider", "Empty Pages" and the ultra cool 11+ minute "Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys". With that being said, I'm sitting on the fence regarding "Feelin' Alright". The songs chosen here spot are on accurate - the best songs were chosen from each of the albums represented. But, Island Records skipped anything from their last 4 albums. So, as good as the songs here happen to be, it's not an adequate sampling at all. Traffic's sound was simply different. They were cool in a jazzy/fusion/spacy/pop kind of way. I don't recall too many bands like them at the time. They certainly were not like The Beatles or Rolling Stones. Not even close to Jimi Hendrix or anyone else at Woodstock. (Some) Traffic is necessary in your music collection. Over the years several compilations have hit the stores trying to adequately capture the best schmattering of songs. As for a single disc 'best of', this one is good... BUT it only covers a fraction of their catalog. For a more detailed mix, I'd go with the hard to find "Smiling Phases" (1991) with 2-discs and 26 tracks... and something from each of their studio albums. Looking for a single studio album - I'd first go with "John Barleycorn" (simply a great album, and backed up by the liner notes indicating this is/was Traffic's best selling album in the U.S. by a wide margin), followed by "Low Spark" and/or "Mr. Fantasy".
Good, but why buy this when there is Smiling Phases!?!?!?.......2006-04-17
Great overview of Traffic's earlier work........2006-02-04
It traces the band's progression from the psychedelic rock of "Mr. Fantasy" to the later jazz/blues of "John Barleycorn" and "Low Spark".
Every track on this CD is a winner!
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Vaudeville Villain
Viktor Vaughn aka MF Doom Manufacturer: Traffic Ent. ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000BZYTJ Release Date: 2003-09-16 |
Tracks:
- Overture
- Vaudeville Villain
- Lickupon
- Drop
- Lactose and Lecithin
- Dead Mouse
- Open Mic Nite, Pt. 1 - Louis Logic, Lord Sear, Louis Logic, , Viktor Vaughn, Viktor Vaughn
- Raedawn
- Let Me Watch
- Saliva
- Modern Day Mugging
- Open Mic Nite, Pt. 2
- Never Dead
- Popsnot
- Mr. Clean
- G.M.C.
Customer Reviews:
V walk the town with space boots,space suits, f*cked up cut, but they still say his face cute..........2007-07-15
I can listen to this album on and off for weeks at a time, and so could you if you dig fresh, original hip hop with amazing beats and sampling and off the hook surreal but firm rooted, skillful MC'ing.
Doom is one of those super talented guys that are very rare in any genre, this kid is at the top of his game, with whatever he does. Whatever name he adopts for the time being, whatever positon he fills on an album. He is the man. Buy all Dooms stuff as you can, its all great on some level.
Whenever I hear this album, I think MF Doom meets Steven Spielbergs AI movie meets Thom Yorke and RadioHead for a midnight, liquid LSD enhanced jam session.
Yes, that weird and groovy :0)
Mf Doom's best!!!!.......2007-06-13
Viktor Vaughn.......2007-04-20
Top 5 Tracks
1.Lickupon
2.G.M.C.
3.Never Dead
4.Open Mic Nite Pt.2
5.Change The Beat
DOOM's best.......2007-02-15
Simply amazing........2006-10-13
DOOM himself in incredible on this release. I know a lot of heads have a difficult time adjusting to his style, and flow at first, but once you become acquainted with it, you can appreciate his true genius. The bottom-line is, while some rappers are simply droning about guns and womens in a monotone voice, and hide their obvious weaknesses as an emcee underneath their image, DOOM kicks sick verbals, with a stream-of-consciousness flow untouched by anyone else in the game. In between his wildly animated lyrics, and stunning punchlines, he drops gem after gem of knowledge, which a lot of people who look for reasons to diss DOOM often overlook.
Production on this released is handled by a handful of indy producers, who all provide dope beats for DOOM. DOOM didn't produce a single joint on this album, but despite that, the sound is still uniquely Metal Fingers. While all DOOM albums have a couple of haunting, and somber cuts, this may also be DOOM's darkest album to date, with tracks like Lickupon, Never Dead, and Let Me Watch.
If you're open minded towards music, then it's incredibly easy to get into DOOM. He isn't like any rapper in the game; underground or mainstream. No one can kick verbals like DOOM, however, if you're not familiar with him, and you ARE familiar with some of the Wu-Tang Clan, then it also shouldn't be hard to get into DOOM, since his style is similar(in vein) to ODB, only more comprehensible, and his flow is like a more animated Ghostface Killah's. Either way, this album is perfect from start to finish, and all hip-hop heads should be able to appreciate it, if not love it.
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Mr. Fantasy
Traffic Manufacturer: Island ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004WF68 Release Date: 2000-08-29 |
Tracks:
- Heaven Is In Your Mind
- Berkshire Poppies
- House For Everyone
- No Face, No Name, No Number
- Dear Mr. Fantasy
- Dealer
- Utterly Simple
- Coloured Rain
- Hope I Never Find Me There
- Giving To You
- Paper Sun
- Giving To You
- Hole In My Shoe
- Smiling Phases
- Here We Go 'Round The Mulberry Bush
Amazon.com
It's a rather druggy record, Traffic's debut; in fact, decades later, it's still possible to get a decent contact high off of it. From the stuttering, lyrically ponderous "Heaven Is in Your Mind" to the awe-inspiring psychedelic soul of "Dear Mr. Fantasy," this is Traffic's most reverb-saturated and elliptical release. This 2000 reissue is in mono, but it does finally bring the American and British versions of the record together, so that you get "Paper Sun" and other singles from 1967. Dave Mason-era Traffic was nothing if not eclectic. On Mr. Fantasy, they mix and match the art-prog of Caravan and the goofy psychedelia of Sgt. Pepper's with the mellow groove of Procol Harum, the jazz-blues fusion of Graham Bond with the blues-rock of Cream. All that and sitar, too--not to mention Stevie Winwood's riveting vocals. A sheen of silliness covers at least a third of the album; faux-frumpy songs like "House for Everyone" and "Berkshire Poppies" are not-very-witty vaudeville spoofs that are sung in stuffy British accents. Overall, this is an engaging period piece that makes one give thanks for the Program function on the CD player. --Mike McGonigalCustomer Reviews:
A bridge to cross over...........2007-05-31
Traffic.......2007-03-17
A Traffic must have.......2006-11-10
(3.5 stars) Pretty good in some places: dated in others.......2006-11-04
Psychedelic masterpiece, but get the US version!!.......2005-05-27
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That Handsome Devil
That Handsome Devil Manufacturer: Stardust Records/Traffic Ent. ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000GW899Q Release Date: 2006-07-25 |
Tracks:
- Standing Room In Heaven
- Yada Yada
- Sleep It Off
- Elephant Bones
- Dating Tips
- Miss America
- James Dean
Product Description
That Handsome Devil, a born Renaissance man, comes forth with his new genre bending sound: Fringe Pop which is a combination of the last 30 years of counter culture, merging elements of Rock, Lounge, Hip Hop and anything in between.Album Description
Following the self-help single 'Dating Tips' which has since been rumored as the genus of the Neil Strauss book ''The Game'', That Handsome Devil releases their debut self-titled EP. Arriving with an amazing arsenal of explosive riffs, guitars, keys and horns sweetened by the astounding production of Jeremy Page, front man Godforbid creates imagery that takes the listener from lumbering dreamscapes to howling anthems of cock-walking future pop. Chock-full of edgy lyrics delivered with a bar room swagger and raspy gruffness that forces you to trust their depth, charisma and balls, That Handsome Devil comes off like Tom Waits-meets-Ol Dirty Bastard. Forget Gnarls Barkley, thanks to the That Handsome Devil, the art of post-rap song-writing is here to serve you all, kick plenty of ass and take no prisoners.Customer Reviews:
Best Album I Heard This Year -- Seriously.......2007-06-09
Wow.......2007-05-12
This is a MUST for all those "alternative music" lovers out there!
All Music Guide Description .......2007-02-23
This catchy, smart album is my new vice........2007-01-08
Seriously, this album's too good! That Handsome Devil fills a chilled shaker with jiggers of Lounge, Funk, Rock, and Hip Hop, then adds dashes of Surf and Brit Pop for a cocktail that'll knock you over. Don't worry, it's all shaken together with expert care you're gonna like. Trust me. It's Gnarls Barkley meets the Tindersticks to watch a James Bond flick and hit on Go-Go dancers in an opium den.
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Welcome to the Canteen
Traffic Manufacturer: Island ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006399Z Release Date: 2002-03-19 |
Tracks:
- Medicated Goo
- Sad And Deep As You
- 40,000 Headmen
- Shouldn't Have Took More Than You Gave
- Dear Mr. Fantasy
- Gimme Some Lovin'
Amazon.com
To call Traffic "mercurial" might be an understatement. After a promising debut, the band (whose core consisted of vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Stevie Winwood, vocalist-percussionist Jim Capaldi, and winds player-keyboardist Chris Wood) variously broke up, saw Winwood's participation in the supergroup Blind Faith, reformed, and struggled with lineup expansions and contractions. Indeed, this 1971 live album recorded in London followed an unreleased Fillmore East effort by John Barleycorn's four-piece edition (the trio plus Blind Faith bassist Rick Grech). Now rhythmically augmented by Jim Gordon, ex-Dizzy Gillespie sideman Reebop Kwaku Baah, and the return of singer-songwriter Dave Mason for his third stint in the band, Traffic turns in a rich, eclectic set that didn't so much recap their career as retool it entirely. With Mason's more prosaic "Sad and Deep as You Are" and "Shouldn't Have Took More Than You Gave" alternating with the exotic impressionism of "40,000 Headmen," the good-natured R&B of "Medicated Goo," and the early staple "Dear Mr. Fantasy," this sounds like a band with a lot of promise. But typically, Mason's tenure this time 'round lasted just six performances. The feverish, polyrhythmic reworking of Winwood's Spencer Davis hit, "Gimme Some Lovin'," hints at the more fusion-oriented direction the band would take on its next studio album. Unfortunately, modern digital remastering hasn't improved the original recording's somewhat muddled sound. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Welcome to the Canteen par excellence.......2007-06-27
Fabulous live album...........2007-06-22
A classic.......2007-01-11
I love this album.......2006-12-04
Great live recording.......2006-01-29
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Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory
Traffic Manufacturer: Island ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001FV1 Release Date: 2003-05-20 |
Tracks:
- Shoot Out At The Fantasy Factory
- Roll Right Stones
- Evening Blue
- Tragic Magic
- (Sometimes I Feel So) Uninspired
Customer Reviews:
Another classic Traffic album.......2006-12-12
An underrated yet excellent album from Traffic.......2006-10-20
The album opens up with the storming title cut, which has fuzzed out multi-tracked guitars from Steve Winwood over a cookin' groove from the rhythm section of David Hood, Roger Hawkins, Rebop, and Jim Capaldi. The centerpiece of the album has to be the next track, the 14 minute Roll Right Stones, which has some truly excellent chord changes along with great singing from Winwood to go along with his piano and organ playing. Evening Blue is a plaintive ballad driven by acoustic guitar that's very pretty. Chris Wood's Tragic Magic is a jazzy, funky instrumental showcasing his stellar ability on woodwinds. And the closing track, Sometimes I Feel So Uninspired, is a slow burner that is actually pretty uplifting given the rather dour tone of the title.
All in all a fantastic album and if you're a fan of Traffic's "classic" albums (Mr. Fantasty, Traffic, John Barleycorn Must Die, Low Spark) then this is one you should definitely check out.
Another album from the golden age of Traffic's Jazz-Rock excursions.......2006-02-01
The Slow Return to Sanity.......2005-10-11
This style of Music is both calm and powerful and if you've not heard it before it is well worth your investing the time and money. Enjoy
Shoot out all the people outta there listening.......2005-09-22
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