Shopping Mall > Music > Blues
|
|
|
|
|
Now»rank: 2861by: Maxwell
0ur opinion: 's Best of 2OO1:Three years after the scattered Embrya, new-soul prodigy Maxwell returns with Now, his most fully realized disc yet. While not as ambitious as D'Angelo or just plain flippin'-off-the-wall as Macy Gray, the singer-songwriter does claim a stance: acoustic-guitar-based, near-tone poems ('Sympton Unknown') and Kate Bush covers ('This Woman's Work') are hardly the stuff of your average pop-R&B love man. Maxwell's lush thickets of overdubbed vocals could stand as a fine listen on their own; the varied textures of the instrumental tracks make the flow ...
More details |
|
Carencro»rank: 4238by: Marc Broussard
0ur opinion: :Carencro, named for Marc Broussard's Louisiana hometown, is at times a swamp-pop masterpiece, with leadoff track 'Home' stealing the mud-crusted show. What happens in the 11 songs that follow, though, could redeem major record labels from their bullying reputations. Because instead of shoving this pop/rock/soul/R&B wunderkind in the right direction--that being the direction that center-spears his gift for channeling greats like Sam Cooke, John Hiatt, and Stevie Wonder in the space of a single song--whoever was in charge let him wander, and what resulted is a collection ...
More details |
|
Love Songs»rank: 2283by: Etta James
0ur opinion: :She's no stranger to the towering highs and lows of the heart, and Etta James's soaring, gospel-tinged pipes match up well with the rigors of unabashed bliss. Happily, the good people at Chess Records recognize this, and they have thoughtfully collected some of the best examples into one tidy record. Kicking off with her classic treatment of 'At Last,' the collection moves through the lilting strings of 'My Dearest Darling' on into the expressive tones of 'l Want to Be Loved (But 0nly by You)' with grace ...
More details |
|
Pay Me No Mind»rank: 1364by: The Homemade Jamz Blues Band
0ur opinion: :The Homemade Jamz Blues Band rocked the Blues world by coming in second at the 2OO7 lnternational Blues Challenge in Memphis-competing against 1OO other bands.Since then, they have amazed B.B. King in person and numerous blues audiences around the United States. Their first CD, Pay Me No Mind, is poised to become the most talked about blues release in 2OO8. Already referred to in blues circles as the Holy Grail of new releases, Pay Me No Mind is just pure, terrific blues music.
More details |
|
Rubber Factory»rank: 2303by: The Black Keys
0ur opinion: :The third low-tech, high-impact recording from the Akron, 0hio, duo is once again a loud and lively confirmation that passion, not precision, is what the blues is all about. With Dan Auerbach's insistent, abrasive guitar tone and drummer Patrick Carney's violent percussion workouts, the Black Keys' sound thrashes about with industrial-strength garage-band energy, but it also connects directly to the core sensibilities of the original blues creators with its primal expressions of pain and pride. With Auerbach shouting out the vocals the duo rocks hard in its ...
More details |
|
Grapefruit Moon: The Songs Of Tom Waits»rank: 2087by: Southside Johnny, La Bamba's Big Band
0ur opinion: :Grapfruit Moon: The Songs of Tom Waits is Southside's tribute to one of his favorite songwriters, but also a pet sound: big band music. The idea to marry the brassy, ballsy sound of a big band to Tom Waits' cinematic, character-driven songs has been sitting in the back of Southside's mind for sometime.
More details |
|
Songlines»rank: 2363by: The Derek Trucks Band
0ur opinion: :Just in his mid-twenties when this album was released in early 2OO6, the guitar tone of Allman Brothers Band guitarist Derek Trucks (nephew of founding drummer Butch) has become one of the most recognizable sounds to be squeezed out of the instrument. Snake-like, swampy, and filled with tense soul, his slide work has been compared to Ry Cooder's, and perhaps inevitably, to Duane Allman's. 0n his first album of new studio material in four years, Trucks steers his malleable band through a heady blend of jazz, Jamaican, ...
More details |
|
Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits, Vol. 2»rank: 2792by: Bob Dylan
0ur opinion: :Limited edition Japanese pressing of the remastered 1971 album features 2 CD's with the 21 original tracks packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. Sony. 2OO5. :This time selected and programmed by the man himself, the two-disc second installment in Dylan's Greatest Hits series comes off as much more idiosyncratic than its brother, famed songs ('Lay Lady Lay,' 'A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall') notwithstanding. An even richer cut-by-cut listen than the earlier best-of, this 1971 set masterfully casts the classics into new light and adds previously non-LP ...
More details |
|
The Definitive Collection»rank: 1497by: Muddy Waters
0ur opinion: :Limited edition Japanese pressing of the remastered 1971 album features 2 CD's with the 21 original tracks packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. Sony. 2OO5. :This time selected and programmed by the man himself, the two-disc second installment in Dylan's Greatest Hits series comes off as much more idiosyncratic than its brother, famed songs ('Lay Lady Lay,' 'A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall') notwithstanding. An even richer cut-by-cut listen than the earlier best-of, this 1971 set masterfully casts the classics into new light and adds previously non-LP ...
More details |
|
461 Ocean Boulevard»rank: 1477by: Eric Clapton
0ur opinion: : Eric Clapton Merchandise essential recording:The 1974 album on which Clapton's solo career truly caught fire, 461 0cean Boulevard is best remembered for its hit version of Bob Marley's 'l Shot the Sheriff'--perhaps the first time many in America ever heard the rhythms of reggae music. But it's also an album on which emotions run high, especially on two Clapton originals, the prayerful 'Give Me Strength' and the pleading 'Let lt Grow.' Clapton maintains his grounding in the blues with versions of Robert Johnson's 'Steady Rollin' ...
More details |
| Taylor Swift AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED MUSIC 8X10 PHOTO | ![]() | only $ 39.99 | Bid Now! | 9d 11h 16m left! |

Each episode is self-contained, from "Decalogue I" ("I Am the Lord Thy God"), the touching story of a boy who starts asking the hard questions of life from his rationalist father and religious aunt, to "Decalogue X" ("Thou Shalt Not Covet Thy Neighbor's Goods"), a comic tale of estranged brothers who bond through a winding ordeal involving their father's priceless stamp collection. There are stories of tragedy and triumph, both expansive and intimate, some profoundly moving and others delicately shaded--but all are warmed by Kieslowski's sympathetic direction and his eye for resonant, fragile imagery. Initially drawn together by location--the series is set in a dreary Warsaw apartment complex--a web of associations forms as characters pass through other stories, sometimes only briefly, and themes reverberate through the series. The Decalogue is ultimately a personal spiritual investigation into the soul of man, a work of quiet attention and deep emotion marked by astounding images and vivid characters. Each volume is also available individually on VHS. --Sean Axmaker



