| | Sue Foley Without A Warning CD Sue Foley Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Personnel: Sue Foley (guitar, vocals); Angela Strehli (vocals); Gene Taylor (piano); Riley Osbourn (organ); Jon Penner (bass); Fredd E. "Pharoah" Walden (drums).
Engineers: Frank Campbell, Stuart Sullivan, Larry Seyer, Larry Greenhill.
;Aug 2000
Down Beat (2/94, p.59) - 3 Stars - Good - "...it's her guitar playing, with its snapping notes and steady gait, that pulls you into the music...." Sing Out! (11-12/94-1/95, p.134) - "...Foley has captured blues themes: tired of being lonely, I love you, I cry for you. She has equally well captured blues forms: ballads with simple refrains....Foley walks that turf with a soft alto, sometimes kittenish, often crooning, yet mostly not howling enough..." Sue Foley Without A Warning Songs | 1. | Come Into My Arms |
| 2. | Ruby Duby Du |
| 3. | Open up Your Eyes |
| 4. | Give Me Time |
| 5. | Hooker Thing |
| 6. | Sad Sad City |
| 7. | Truckin' Little Woman |
| 8. | Sue's Boogaloo |
| 9. | Cry For Me |
| 10. | Live Together |
| 11. | Without a Warning |
| 12. | Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is |
| 13. | Annie's Driftin' Heart |
| Without A Warning Music Review Purchase Without A Warning CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Sue Foley 10 Days In November CD (1998)
Without A Warning
$14.59
| | Sue Foley Big City Blues CD (1995)
Without A Warning
$10.49
| | Daniel Desnoyers Dancexpress 6 CD (2007)
Without A Warning
$26.79
| | Blood Brothers March On Electric Children CD (2002)
Without A Warning
$11.29 This energy-core spazz-out session just might make you want to try to attach yourself to the ceiling with your teeth. The Blood Brothers meld upbeat, awkwardly rhythmic garage-core with a dual breakdance scream-athon, piano, and riot-inciting caterwauling. The concept-album-esque title and theme of March on Electric Children revolve around degraded entertainment, based on an abstract ...
| | Kenny "Blues Boss" Wayne Let It Loose CD (2005)
Without A Warning
$13.85 It's easy to assume that anyone with a nickname like "Blues Boss" would -- when it came to playing the blues -- have the goods, and Kenny Wayne does. But Wayne's blues isn't the kind of music that inspires one to cry in one's beer. From the start of Let It Loose, it's clear that the pianist/singer is determined, above and beyond everything else, to have a good time with the music. "Blackberry Wine" is taken at an upbeat tempo guaranteed to jump-start any country dance, while the chorus of the midtempo "Let Me Go Home Whiskey" recalls the smooth harmony singing of the Mills Brothers. Wayne's a good singer who adds lots of energy to the lyrics of songs like the title track, and it's easy to convince oneself that he recorded these pieces on the stage as opposed to the studio. This vocal approach is perfectly matched with his happy piano playing. Wayne loves upbeat material -- like "I Never Will Forgive You" -- that allows him to cut loose with abandon on the keyboard. It doesn't hurt that he's backed ...
| | Caterina Valente Fire And Frenzy & South Of The Border CD (2006) (Import)
Without A Warning
$18.89
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