| | Badfinger Straight Up CD Badfinger Discography of CDs
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Badfinger: Joey Molland (vocals, guitar); Pete Ham (guitar); Tom Evans (bass instrument); Mike Gibbins (drums). Additional personnel: George Harrison (slide guitar); Leon Russell (piano). Straight Up winds up somewhat less dynamic than No Dice, largely because that record alternated its rockers, pop tunes, and ballads. Here, everything is at a similar level, as the ballads are made grander and the rockers have their melodic side emphasized. Consequently, the record sounds more unified than No Dice, which had a bit of a split personality. Todd Rundgren's warm, detailed production makes each songwriter sound as if he was on the same page, although the bonus tracks -- revealing the abandoned original Geoff Emerick productions -- prove that the distinctive voices on No Dice were still present. Frankly, the increased production is for the best, since Badfinger sounds best when there's as much craft in the production as there is in the writing. Here, there's absolutely no filler and everybody is in top form. Pete Ham's "Baby Blue" is textbook power-pop -- irresistibly catchy fuzz riffs and sighing melodies -- and with its Harrison-esque slide guitars, "Day After Day" is so gorgeous it practically aches. "Perfection" is an unheralded gem, while "Name of the Game" and "Take It All" are note-perfect pop ballads. Tom Evans isn't as prolific here, but the one-two punch of "Money" and "Flying" is the closest Straight Up gets to Abbey Road, and "It's Over" is a fine closer. Still, what holds the record together is Joey Molland's emergence as a songwriter. His work on No Dice is enjoyable, but here, he comes into his own with a set of well-constructed songs. This fine songwriting, combined with sharp performances and exquisite studio craft, make Straight Up one of the cornerstones of power-pop, a record that proved that it was possible to make classic guitar-pop after its golden era had passed. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine STRAIGHT UP is Badfinger's best-known album and perhaps the definitive example of their sparkling brand of Beatles-influenced pop. Expertly produced by George Harrison and Todd Rundgren, this 1972 album spawned two hit singles (both written by group leader Pete Ham): the romantic ballad "Day After Day" (Badfinger's only gold record) and "Baby Blue," a soaring power pop classic that is still regularly played on rock radio. Most people remember Badfinger for those two songs, but the 10 other tracks on STRAIGHT UP are equally impressive. Less rock-oriented than their previous album NO DICE (although guitarist Joey Molland contributes several excellent high-energy rock songs like "Sometimes" and "Suitcase"), the majority of STRAIGHT UP consists of gentle, melodic songs like Molland's folkish "Sweet Tuesday Morning" and superb Pete Ham compositions like the epic existentialist ballad "Name Of The Game." Now reissued with alternate versions of five of the album's songs and a rare single version of "Baby Blue," STRAIGHT UP sounds better than ever and is an essential addition to any rock fan's music collection.Q (6/93, p.115) - 4 Stars (out of 5) - "...Poignantly written, brimming with mature melodies and bracing verse/chorus interplay, STRAIGHT UP is one not to miss. More complete than their other long-play selections and resplendent with previously unheard gems, it's quality stuff..." NME (Magazine) (6/5/93, p.34) - "...A stone cold beauty of an album....an impossibly good album....Love it like your mother..." Straight Up Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)   Good Job CDUniverse has an outstanding collectionfor Classic Rock lovers like me!They have what you want and get it to you fast!Greatwebsite/helpsyou find what you want quickly and easily Submitted by vesna1 (Eastman,GA,USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
About as close to *Perfection* as you can get... ...not a bad track on this CD. There is a reason it was top of the polls when the public was asked, "Which recording would you like to see on CD the most?" Stands the test of time and would recommend it highly. Pete Ham was a genius....still miss him. Submitted by Peach K. (Colorado, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
a great listener> A majority of this album being produced by George Harrison plays a major role in defining Badfingers "beatles" style play. They are tasteful, musical, and catchy...with some great numbers. Day after Day and Baby Blue are two outstanding tracks, which I can never hear enough of.....the rest is all great stuff....definitely a good purchase! Submitted by Classic Rock Fanatic (Georgia) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Just about the best there is!! Their 3rd album is one of my two favorites of Badfinger. It includes my favorite song, "Baby Blue." On here also is the mega-hit "Day After Day," but that is not all!! There are plenty other very memorable songs. You will love this CD from the very first listen. Submitted by John Huggins (Dallas, Texas) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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| | Tunnelvision Watching The Hydroplanes CD (2005)
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$14.15 LTM is pleased to announce a second archive CD by the cult band Tunnelvision, who recorded for Factory Records in 1980/81 and were produced by Martin Hannett and Peter Hook. From Blackpool on the North of England, cold wavers Tunnelvision were spotted by Factory at the 2nd even New Order gig in September 1980, and recorded the single Watching the Hydroplanes/Morbid Fear with legendary producer Martin Hannett. Their second demo, recorded the following year, was mixed by Peter Hook of New Order. The youthful band split in early 1982. 'Watching the Hydroplanes' combines both sides of the Factory single with all eight studio demo tracks recorded by the band in 1980-81, carefully remastered from original analogue mastertapes that for many years were thought to have been lost. In addition there is the pre-Hook mix of the second demo and a portastudio demo track. Features a faithful adaption of the original Martyn Atkins 7" sleeve artwork and includes a booklet of detailed band biography and archive photos. 2005.
Audio Mixer: Peter Hook. Liner Note Author: James Nice. Recording information: 1981-1982. Editor: James Nice. Following on some years after a single-disc compilation of available Tunnelvision material, LTM returned to the band by offering up two separate discs, ...
| | Inamere Pick Your Poison CD (2006)
Straight Up
$10.15 INAMERE has held the Top 35 position for the last 16 weeks on Smartpunk's Top 100 bestselling bands, and has been featured artist on Purevolume's PurePick. INAMERE, of Morristown, New Jersey, is ripping up the rulebook on the indie front. Formed in November of 2005, the band began as a four-piece consisting of front man James Kelly, guitarist Chris Keown, bassist Ryan Hayes, and drummer ...
| | Peter Brotzmann Octet Complete Machine Gun Sessions CD (2007)
Straight Up
$12.19 Peter Brötzmann: Willem Breuker (bass clarinet); Evan Parker (tenor saxophone); Peter Brötzmann (baritone saxophone); Fred Van Hove (piano); Bushi Niebergall, Peter Kowald (bass guitar); Han Bennink, Sven-Åke Johansson (drums). Recorded in 1968 at Lile Eule club in Bremen, Germany, the Peter Brotzman Octet's MACHINE GUN is a Rosetta Stone for continental free jazz. Featuring such soon-to-be improv legends as saxophonist Evan Parker, reeds player Willem Breuker, and of course Brotzman himself, MACHINE GUN is a mind-blowing study in unbridled musical energy. The playing is simply furious, and hits a fever pitch from note one, letting up for nary a second over the course of the album's three extended tracks. Yet despite the seemingly chaotic timbre of the proceedings, there are moments that genuinely swing here, making it clear that Brotzman and his boys are part of the jazz tradition even if their intent may be to drag that tradition into shocking new realms. Atavistic Records reissued the complete sessions in 2008 on their Unheard Music Series imprint, and included a pair of alternate takes and a live performance of "Machine Gun." Thanks to Atavistic and its truly treasured Unheard Music Series, we finally have the Complete Machine Gun Sessions as recorded in 1968. That short-lived but forever memorable (in the annals of free music lore) band was led by the vision and über lungs of saxophonist/composer Peter Brötzmann. It was built out of his stellar trio with pianist Fred Van Hove and drummer Han Bennink (the Europeans were already tearing down the walls of nationalism and their association with the American free jazz scene). John Corbett, that wild poet, thinker, essayist, musician, disc jokey, and knower of all secret cultural connections between the "then" and "now" (we are lucky to have him) claims in his liner notes to this riotous set that Brötzmann "drew on the huge horn section of Lionel Hampton's "Flying Home" for inspiration, translating the hilarious saxophonic power of the jump blues and Illinois ...
| | Gotta Serve Somebody: Gospel Songs Of Bob Dylan CD (2003)
Straight Up
$5.95 Includes liner notes by Tom Piazza and Horace Clarence Boyer. GOTTA SERVE SOMEBODY was nominated for the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album. "Gonna Change My Way Of Thinking" was nominated for Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals. The concept of a compilation of Bob Dylan's gospel songs is certainly an idea whose time has come. That this does not feature Dylan performing the original versions of these songs is yet another. Executive producer Jeffrey Gaskill assembled a wide-ranging assortment of the hottest talent in the gospel arena, both past and present, to perform the songs from Dylan's Slow Train Coming and Saved albums, and producer Rob Moss extracted phenomenal performances from Shirley Caesar, the Fairfield Four, the Sounds of Blackness, Rance Allen, the Chicago Mass Choir fronted by Regina McCrary (who sang backup for Dylan on the 1978 and 1979 tours when these recordings were originally done), the Mighty Clouds of Joy, Helen Baylor (with Billy Preston), Aaron Neville, Dottie Peoples, Lee Williams & the Spiritual QC's, and Mavis Staples and Dylan himself (performing a duet on a completely rewritten version of "Gonna Change My Way of Thinkin'"). In addition, a reunion of Dylan's touring band from the period, which included Tim Drummond, Jim Keltner, and Spooner Oldham, performs on "Solid Rock" with the Sounds of Blackness. All of this is interesting, of course, but listeners know that all-star tributes fall short more often than not. This is no tribute, however, but a showcase of Dylan as one of the great gospel songwriters -- albeit 25 years after the fact. Caesar's version of the title track is a scorcher and would not have been out of place in a church pastored by James Cleveland. The Sounds of Blackness' "Solid Rock" does indeed rock -- it's funky, driving, and wrapped loosely around a minor-key trill and riff pulsing just ahead of the beat. Lee Williams & the Spiritual QC's' sweet, swinging read of "When You Gonna Wake Up" is smooth and haunting, like a more streetwise version of the Impressions, giving the groove in the tune a bluesier edge than the original. Peoples' ...
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