| | Tim Mcgraw CD Tim Mcgraw Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Three songs -- "Welcome to the Club," "Memory Lane," and "Two Steppin' Mind" -- appeared on the bottom half of the Billboard singles chart, which suggested that Tim McGraw had some talent but wasn't anything special...yet. In a year that introduced Clay Walker and Doug Supernaw, hardly anybody noticed this young-hat act at the time (but they would), while his contemporaries have already become has-beens. Signed to Curb Records, McGraw, a Louisiana native, would quickly establish himself, becoming a superstar and a modern-day legend of contemporary country music who has yet to rest on his laurels. Produced by Byron Gallimore, this debut is memorable if only for those three singles, and the trademark voice that harked back to the tradition begat by Merle Haggard and George Jones, though McGraw is also deeply stylistically indebted to singers like Randy Travis and George Strait. And even though McGraw's sound at the time was a bit generic, he would soon delve deeply -- with his own crack band, the Dancehall Doctors -- into country-rock, blues, and even hip-hop for inspiration. Not only would he find them, he would turn the country world on its ear in doing so. Of all his peers, McGraw is the real thing, and the roots of that individuality are heard on this set; it contains the grain of that now instantly identifiable voice. ~ Brian Mansfield & Thom Jurek
Personnel: Tim McGraw (vocals); Sonny Garrish (guitar, steel guitar); Larry Byron (guitar); Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Larry Byrom (acoustic guitar); Chris Leuzinger, Brent Rowan (electric guitar); Glen Duncan (fiddle); Gary Prim (piano, synthesizer); James Stroud, Paul Leim (drums); Curtis Wright, Curtis Young, James King (background vocals).
Audio Mixer: Lynn Peterzell.
Recording information: Eleven Eleven Sound Studios, Nashville, TN; Mesa Recording; Sixteenth Avenue Sound, Nashville, TN.
Photographer: Senor McGuire.
Personnel: Tim McGraw (vocals); Larry Byrom, Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar); Brent Rowan, Chris Leuzinger (electric guitar); Sonny Garrish (steel guitar); Glen Duncan (fiddle); Gary Prim (piano, synthesizer); Jim Carter, Glenn Worf (bass); James Stroud, Paul Leim (drums); Curtis Young, Curtis Wright, James King (background vocals).
Producers: James Stroud, Byron Gallimore, Doug Johnson.
Tim Mcgraw Music Review Average Rating: (4.5 out of 5 stars)   Tim McGraw never fails! I became a Tim McGraw fan when I first heard his CD 'All I Want', and have become a HUGE fan since. I got this CD (his first) for Christmas this year, and now I see where his career began. His new stuff has evolved so much from this more down-home and twangy CD, but I enjoy all of his music. If you are a fan of real country (not the pop/rock it's becoming lately), or a fan of Tim McGraw himself, I'm sure you will like this. AND, it's so old that it's gone down in price... can't beat that, lol. Submitted by a reviewer (!!CaNaDa Eh!!) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Great cd , you will love it !!! "For a 1993 release the music is as good as a new release,and i love Tims new music."
#1 Fan Tim Fan
Jim
Submitted by jdazevedo (Huntington Beach , Ca.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Tim Mcgraw CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Tim Mcgraw Not A Moment Too Soon CD (1994)
Tim Mcgraw album
$6.39 The key element in young McGraw's appealing country synthesis is the persistent undercurrent of chicken-fried rock'n'roll in the mix, as on the bluesy "40 Days And 40 Nights" and the pulsating "Ain't That Just Like A Dream," with its big, ringing arena gestures (descended from bands the likes of Lynyrd Skynyrd). Not that McGraw can't get next to a ballad, as he demonstrates on the steel-guitar inflected "Wouldn't Want It Any Other Way" and the nostalgic "Don't Take The Girl."
But it's the hard-charging, dancing "turbo tonk" of tunes like his big hit "Indian Outlaw"--with its shifting tom-tom groove, shuffling blues jig and fiddling square dance breaks--that best captures the rowdy spirit and rough-and-ready delivery of Tim McGraw. Daddy Tug McGraw (a pitching hero for 20-plus years with championship New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies teams) must be proud.
With his high lonesome yodel, and jacked-up honky tonk groove, singer Tim McGraw is the latest in a new generation of country heartthrobs to capture the imagination ...
| | Tim Mcgraw All I Want CD (1995)
Tim Mcgraw CD music
$5.99 If you're always throwing hard, the danger is your arm's going to get tired rather quickly. In baseball, that means it's nice to learn another pitch besides the fastball. In Nashville, it means ya gotta have ballads.
Tim McGraw, son of baseball player Tug, started his career with rocked-up, honky-tonk fastballs; but now, as if realizing there's a full season ahead, he settles in and sets out to make a name for himself as a balladeer. ALL I WANT, his third album, starts and ends with country-rock anthems, but the pitch he keeps going back to is a softer, more plaintive one. The songs here, including "Can't Be Really Gone," a string-bathed ballad in which a guy sifts through every tangible reason why the woman who just left him couldn't have actually left ("Her book is lying on the bed/The two of hearts to mark her page/Now, who would ever walk away/At chapter twenty-one"), and "I Didn't Ask And She Didn't Say," about an awkward meeting of old lovers, are truly affecting. McGraw sings them with just enough of a catch in his voice to suggest the romantic pain they evoke, without going overboard toward melodrama.
Yet, rock and roll still courses through McGraw's veins. "She Never Lets It Go To Her Heart" has an electric guitar jangle that suggests a middle-ground between John Hiatt, Jim Lauderdale and Marshall Crenshaw, and "Renegade" has a southern rock chorus the Outlaws would've loved. You can almost feel the twitch in his hips when he sings "I Like It, I Love It." You may also remember ...
| | Tim Mcgraw Everywhere CD (1997)
Tim Mcgraw music CDs
$5.95 "It's Your Love" was nominated for 1998 Grammy Awards for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals and Best Country Song.
EVERYWHERE starts out strong with "Where The Green Grass Grows," a rocking anthem for country living, guaranteed to make even city folks hum along. And though the album contains its fair share of up-tempo songs, the real treats here are the slower ballads. Tim McGraw may wear a big, imposing hat, but under the brim lies a sensitive soul. "It's Your Love" is a heartfelt torch song duet with Tim's wife, Faith Hill.
Tim's strength stems from willingness to share his vulnerability. The title song tells the story of a past love, now hopelessly out of reach. The singer imagines her everywhere he's not. While the protagonist may never find this woman, no matter where she travels, it's likely to be difficult for her to avoid hearing at least one song off EVERYWHERE, so solid is the appeal of this proven hit-maker.
Personnel: Faith Hill, Timothy B. Schmit (vocals); Larry Byrom, B. James Lowry, Biff Watson, J.T. Corenflos (acoustic guitar); Dann Huff, Michael Landau, Pat Buchanan, Brent Rowan (electric guitar); Paul Franklin, Sonny Garrish (steel guitar); Mark Casstevens (banjo); Glen Duncan, Stuart ...
| | Tim Mcgraw Place In The Sun CD (1999)
Tim Mcgraw songs
$6.09 "Please Remember Me" was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance.
Tim McCraw won the 2000 CMA Award for Male Vocalist Of The Year.
"My Best Friend" was nominated for the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance.
With A PLACE IN THE SUN, Tim McGraw, the son of legendary baseball player Tug McGraw, has hit a musical home run. The follow-up to his insanely successful EVERYWHERE, A PLACE IN THE SUN contains McGraw's signature mix of traditional country, humor, romance and rowdiness. McGraw has a real talent for choosing well-crafted, slightly off-kilter songs (from top Nashville talents like Walt Alridge, Phil Vassar, Hillary Kanter and Mark Nesler), and delivering them so convincingly that you can almost believe he's the one who wrote them.
The 15 tracks range from the hard country of "She'll Have You Back" (the punch line is "...back to drinking in no time") to the heartfelt romance of "My Best Friend" to the sweeping grandeur of "Please Remember Me" (featuring harmonies by Patty Loveless). Highlights include "The Trouble With Never," the boisterous "Something Like That" and "My Next Thirty Years," a fantastic song about a man saying good-bye to his youth while he prepares, with some trepidation, to face the second half of his life. Fans may be ...
| | Tim Mcgraw & The Dancehall Doctors CD (2002)
Tim Mcgraw album
$6.19 "She's My Kind Of Rain" was nominated for the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance.
Tim McGraw has sold millions of records by shuttling between pleasantly cornpone neo-honky tonk and Mark Wills/John Michael Montgomery-style lite-pop balladry. With TIM MCGRAW AND THE DANCEHALL DOCTORS, however, the singer pulls off the wholly unexpected feat of creating an album so richly textured and boldly mature, it makes much of his earlier work seem silly by comparison. Completely absent are the usual drippy sentiments and good 'ol boy bluster; in their place are thoroughly adult themes and effortlessly soulful vocal performances.
Like Waylon Jennings two decades earlier, McGraw makes his artistic breakthrough by recording with his touring band. Tracked in an old mansion a la LED ZEPPELIN IV, the disc has an energetic earthiness rarely achieved in contemporary country. The songs are, if not as instantly memorable as "Indian Outlaw," much more substantial, and the playing is exuberant throughout. Perhaps the most striking thing about the record, though, is its distinctly country-influenced (rather than country) feel. In fact, the album sounds like it would fit very nicely in the Eagles' catalog, right between ON THE BORDER and ONE OF THESE NIGHTS. Obviously, it'll take a few more records of ...
| | Tadpoles Whirlaway CD (1999)
Tim Mcgraw CD music
$9.35 From Hoboken, NJ, Tadpoles return with their fourth self-released studio CD. The band's first albums featured a modern psychedelic sound, but with its last disc Smoke Ghost and this current offering, Tadpoles' sound is evolving and maturing into a straight-ahead melodic rock sound which still keeps plenty of fuzz intact. With prior releases, Tadpoles specialized in midtempo songs; Whirlaway finds the band comfortable with faster rock numbers as well as slower, heavier barn-burners. "Frances the Dancer," the leadoff track, features the classic Tadpoles sound of melodic guitar-driven rock punctuated by sheets of distortion and feedback, plus a conga track that adds percussive interest. "Frances" was written and sung by guitarist Todd Parker, whose Marc Bolan-esque voice contrasts with Nick Kramer, composer of several other songs, such as the heavy workout "Lyman Bostock." His songs resemble the music of Kevin Ayers, with his bass voice and personal yet enigmatic lyrics. Elsewhere, analog synthesizers spice up the proceedings, as on the title track. Later on the album, Tadpoles experiment with early Pink Floyd-like extended instrumental jams on "Smile If You've Crossed Over" and "Horse and Buggy." While this type of material is not Tadpoles' strength, sandwiched between those two is the Lennon-esque "Sunrise Ocean Bender," a modern psychedelic masterpiece which ranks among the best songs Tadpoles have recorded. Whirlaway was named for an unpredictable 1940s racehorse whose record was erratic until his handler modified the horse's blinker; clear vision on his left side enabled Whirlaway to become a champion. With the album Whirlaway, Tadpoles continue to focus and strengthen their approach to both performing and songwriting; they've come up with another winner. ~ Jim Powers
Tadpoles, based in Hoboken, NJ, disbanded in 2000 after releasing 4 critically acclaimed studio albums, 1 live album and 1 E.P. all on their own Bakery Records label (except for their last studio album, Whirlaway, which was released on Australia's Camera Obscura Records.) The group was formed by vocalist/guitarist, Todd Parker and original drummer, Michael Kite Audino in New York City in 1990.Members of the New York group, HIT, bassist David Max & guitarist/vocalist Nick Kramer joined in 1992 and Adam Boyette became the full time drummer in 1996.Career highlights include a four-star review in Rolling Stone magazine (May 1996) for their second studio album, Far Out, which like all of their studio albums (except Whirlaway) was produced by Shimmy Disc/Bongwater mogul, Kramer.The group was also featured in the first Terrastock festival in Providence, Rhode Island in 1997 and their performance was captured on their live album "Destroy Terrastock-Live." Although Tadpoles rarely performed live, their shows were always a multi-media sensory overload experience with films, videos, strobe lights, and other homemade ...
| | Best Of Xavier Cugat CD (2004) Japan
Tim Mcgraw music CDs
$26.95
| | Pickin On Pickin' On Montgomery Gentry CD (2004)
Tim Mcgraw songs
$15.19
| | Janette Carter Deliverence Will Come CD (2004) (Import) Germany
Tim Mcgraw album
$22.05 Bear Family, the respected reissue label from Germany, continues its deep mine of the Carter Family archives with this issue by A.P. and Sara Carter's youngest daughter, Janette. Along with older brother Joe, she runs the Carter Family Fold in Hiltons, VA, in the shadow of Clinch Mountain. Janette and her brother are the caretakers of the family legacy. The 31 cuts on this set contain two complete albums, Storms Are on the Ocean, originally recorded in 1972 for the tiny Birch Records label from Willamette, IL, and 1973's Howdayadoo, released on the Crosby, TN, Traditional imprint. The rest include A.P.'s "Storms Are on the Ocean," recorded for Blue Jay in 1968, a pair of live cuts issued on a Traditional collection, and two tracks from 2001, including the original "Johnny Doesn't Live Here Anymore." The remastering is excellent and the material is simply fantastic. It's a mix of Carter songs and traditional folk tunes that the Carters either did record or would have been comfortable doing so. Janette accompanies herself on autoharp on all these tracks, and has a minimal host of players -- mostly uncredited -- on others. The running time is 73 minutes and change, and the entire thing is deeply moving, plaintive, and full of emotion as well as history. Highly recommended. ~ Thom Jurek
Every Saturday night for a quarter-century, Janette ...
| | Clint Black One Emotion CD (1994)
Tim Mcgraw CD music
$7.99 Although Black is a first-rate songwriter, two highlights were co-written with other superstars. "Untanglin' My Mind" was written with Clint's idol, country legend, Merle Haggard. With its whiney steel guitar and plaintive lyrics, it is country at its most traditional. On the other hand, "Almost A Lifetime," written with Michael McDonald, is a country/pop/jazz hybrid which also serves as an excellent showcase for Black's versatile vocal prowess.
Clint Black has one of the most powerful, emotive voices in country music, and with his long-time collaborator, Hayden Nicholas, he constructs well-honed trad-country and pop-country songs which never stray too far from the winning style made so popular with his breakthrough KILLIN' TIME.
Whether he's singing about the power of love in "You Made Me Feel," the exasperation of ending a relationship, "If anyone should ask...tell them you drove me crazy," or aging in "Life Gets Away," Clint Black has effectively created a full-blown document of his life and ALL the emotions that make up the broad ...
| | Country Music On The Capitol Label CD (Import) United Kingdom
Tim Mcgraw music CDs
$31.55 Track Listing of songs: Heartbreaker; If I Cry; Butterfly Love; I'll ...
| | Debutaunts Flowers From Evil CD (2008)
Tim Mcgraw songs
$10.15 During the release, promotion and tour of their self titled EP “2007”, DEBUTAUNTS, feverishly inspired; began to write what has now become the Flowers from Evil EP released in late 2008. Produced, Recorded, and Mixed by one of today’s ...
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