| | Country Gentlemen Live In Japan CD Country Gentlemen Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $12.95 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
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Charlie Waller (vocals, guitar); Bill Emerson (vocals, banjo); Doyle Lawson (vocals, mandolin); Bill Yates (vocals, bass).
Live in Japan captures a strong early '70s concert from the Country Gentlemen, spotlighting much of their best-known material, as well as their excellent harmony and instrumental skills. ~ Thom Owens Country Gentlemen Live In Japan Songs Live In Japan Music Review Purchase Live In Japan CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Award Winning Country Gentlemen CD (1972)
Live In Japan album
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Live In Japan CD music
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Live In Japan music CDs
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| | Essential George Jones: The Spirit Of Country CDs (1994) DBL Jewel Case
Live In Japan songs
$21.69 Principally recorded in Beaumont, Texas and Nashville, Tennessee between 1955 and 1987. Includes a 32-page booklet with liner notes by Rich Kienzle.
If any artist cried out for a cross-licensed, multi-label retrospective, it was George Jones. When Epic/Legacy released the double-disc The Essential George Jones: The Spirit of Country in 1994, he had recorded for no less than six labels -- in chronological order: Starday, Mercury, United Artists, Musicor, Epic, MCA (since then, he's added two more labels: Elektra and BNA/RCA) -- over the course of four decades, a discographical nightmare if there ever was one. The Spirit of Country was the first (and, to date, only) to attempt a serious, multi-label overview of George Jones' lengthy career, and while it has a few flaws, it nevertheless is indeed essential as an overview of his prolific work, tracing his hits from 1955's "Why Baby Why" to 1989's wonderful "The King Is Gone (And So Are You)." That means there's nothing from his MCA records here, but that's not a major problem, since his peak ...
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| | Bluebottle Kiss Come Across CD (2004)
Live In Japan music CDs
$15.19 Although only the group's second album to be distributed in the U.S., Come Across is the Australian band's fifth release, and it sounds it. Bluebottle Kiss' first record came out in 1995, which gave the quartet nearly a decade to tighten and refine their sound for this triumphant 2004 disc. Although by the liner notes alone this looks like a solo project for singer/songwriter/producer Jamie Hutchings who is clearly the band's driving force, the other three members -- augmented by Sophie Hutchings' glistening piano on nearly every track -- are to Jamie as the Who were to Pete Townsend and Crazy Horse were to Neil Young. They flesh out his poetic, often stream of consciousness ramblings, adding musical tension and passion to words and melodies that would not have the same impact without the band's input. Echoes of fellow Australians Paul Kelly, Midnight Oil and Nick Cave drift through these taut tunes whose lyrics are thoughtful and meaningful but never pretentious. The magnificent folk-turned-blistering-rock of "Everything Begins and Ends at Exactly the Right Time," complete with angelic choir, and the seven-minute epic "Cross Purpose," a story song whose doomy narrative is perfectly reflected in the yin-yang pull of the music, are a few of the outstanding set pieces. They work most effectively within the context of the album. Hutchings isn't a terribly happy guy, and his often bleak songs reflect the longing, guilt, conflict and occasional redemption of characters who likely mirror the songwriter's own demons ...
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$16.45 Bay Area singer/songwriters Deborah Levoy and Josh Coleman began collaborating when their paths crossed on a turbulent flight from San Francisco to Nashville. Their debut album, Something Sacred, radiates with crackling energy. Levoy's powerful and emotive voice alternately soothes, soars, and scorches across tracks infused with Coleman's red-hot guitar licks and moody atmospheric effects created by SF studio mastermind, Joel Jaffe. Levoy and Coleman's riveting storytelling in Something Sacred will come as no suprise to audiences more familiar with their solo performances and albums. The raw and rootsy ...
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