| | Moon Revisted CD
 |
|
Our Price: $14.29 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $8.91
|  |
This is part of Magna Carta's Tribute To The Titans Series Moon Revisted Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Moon Revisted CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Moon Revisted CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Tales From Yesterday CD (1995)
Moon Revisted album
$14.49 Beware the perils of the tribute album: as often as not, they only serve to remind you how great the originals are, and that's certainly the case here. A cover should bring something new to a composition, either by enriching its original elements or by transposing genres. Instead, here you have slavish fealty paid by bands who are no doubt sincere in their Yes worship: note-by-note renditions of "Siberian Khatru" by Stanley Snail and "South Side of the Sky" by Cairo, for example. Ironically, the biggest ...
| | Supper's Ready: Another Serving From The Music Box CD (1996)
Moon Revisted CD music
$14.29
| | Working Man CD (1996)
Moon Revisted music CDs
$14.49 As far as tribute albums go, this homage to seminal Canadian rockers Rush is hard to beat. For one thing, Magna Carta has made an inspired decision to have each song recorded by an all-star lineup rather than letting one band handle all the chores (with one exception -- Fates Warning get sole credit for "Closer to the Heart"). Often projects of this magnitude are doomed to failure from the start as a result of inadequate rehearsing, a shoestring budget, and sometimes a lack of talent capable of handling the songs with the respect they deserve. Working Man is a rare instance of everything going right. Terry Brown has done an incredible mixing job considering nearly all of the songs were recorded in different studios. The musicianship rivals the original versions -- occasionally besting them, particularly ...
| | Encores, Legends & Paradox: A Tribute To Elp CD (1999)
Moon Revisted songs
$13.85
| | Carlos Perez - Guitarra Clasica DVD (2006)
Moon Revisted album
$18.29
| | Laurence Juber - In Concert DVD (2006)
Moon Revisted CD music
$13.39
| | Fugs Refuse To Be Burnt Out CDs (1985)
Moon Revisted music CDs
$14.75 This release chronicles the return of the Fugs to the performance stage, which ironically began in 1984 at the height of Ronald Reganmania. However, if Refuse To Be Burnt-Out proves anything, the lesson is that it might be possible to take a freak out of the `60s . but you can never take the `60s out of a freak. The `80s Fugs features original members Tuli Kupferberg and Ed Saunders -- who have updated their sound without ever compromising their message. Compiled from several performances, ...
| | Arthur Prysock This Is My Beloved CD (1968)
Moon Revisted songs
$9.75
| | Toothpaste 2000 VA VA Voom! CD (2000)
Moon Revisted album
$13.85 Toothpaste 2000 are the artists formerly known as Cowboy And Spingirl.
The Toothpaste 2000 duo of Frank Bednash and Donna Esposito (plus revolving drum chair) has been honing its brand of Beatles-influenced pop for many years now, and with Va Va Voom!, Bednash and Esposito show how much they have it down to an art. Their skill is in the writing -- they can make a hook out of almost anything, it seems, and they do on things as far apart as the upbeat "Spacecat" or Esposito's seductive lullaby about alcohol, "Drinkland." They're not afraid to borrow from ...
| | Twothirtyeight Regulate The Chemicals CD (2002)
Moon Revisted CD music
$9.39 With the exception of the ...
| | Derek Miller Music Is The Medicine CD (2002)
Moon Revisted music CDs
$13.39 Native Canadian Derek Miller sounds as if he grew up on all the great blues guitarists from the Mississippi Delta and the later British guitarists of the '60s who brought them back into fashion. Although the title track is ...
| | Vardan Ovsepian Abandoned Wheel CD (2001)
Moon Revisted songs
$19.19
| | Party Groove: Fireball, Vol. 3 CD (2005)
Moon Revisted album
$13.49
| | M Ward Duet For Guitars #2 CD (2004)
Moon Revisted CD music
$12.05 First self-released and then picked up by Howie Gelb's label Ow-Ow in 2000, the album focuses mostly on acoustic musings such as "Good News," "Song From Debby's Stairs," and "Were You There," which feature Ward's undeniably accomplished guitar picking and breezy vocal husk, but breaks up the sequence with the occasional crunchy rocker ("Look Me Over"). Since DUETS, Ward's songs have helped hawk Cadillacs and he's toured the world with Norah Jones, but this reissue shows what impressed in the first place: ace songwriting, impeccable guitar chops, and a voice that simultaneously soothes and haunts.
Originally released in 1999, M. Ward's debut is a sparse, mostly live affair recorded with pal and engineer Adam Selzer of Norfolk & Western at Type Foundry Studio in Portland, OR. Listeners who are already accustomed to Ward's breathy, conversational vocal delivery and soft-picked, West Coast Americana melodies will find much to love here, while those looking for good entry point should probably start with one of his later albums. Duet for Guitars #2 is peppered with instrumentals in the John Fahey and Bad Timing-era Jim O'Rourke vein, and Ward's lackadaisical picking sounds just as lazily precise here as it does on future recordings. There's a real warmth to the sessions that transcends the ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|