| | Marshall Tucker Band Keeping The Love Alive CD Marshall Tucker Band Discography of CDs
Keeping the Love Alive includes Marshall Tucker classics like "Can't You See," "Heard It in a Love Song," "Hangin' Out in Smokey Places" and "Dancin' Shoes." ~ Keith Farley Keeping The Love Alive Music Marshall Tucker Band Keeping The Love Alive Songs Keeping The Love Alive Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Marshall Tucker Band Keeping The Love Alive 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 Keeping The Love Alive CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Allman Brothers Band Dreams CDs (1989) Box Set
Keeping The Love Alive album
$38.09 DREAMS is a 4-CD box set compiling in chronological order tracks by the Allman Brothers Band, as well as tracks by bands featuring one or more member of the Allman Brothers Band and solo performances by Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts.
Recorded between 1966 & 1988. Includes a 32-page illustrated booklet and liner notes by John Swenson.
Like nearly all box sets, DREAMS has plenty to recommend it-and a few nagging drawbacks. The set's chief shortcoming is its two conflicting goals: providing an overview of the Allmans' ...
| | Marshall Tucker Band Stompin' Room Only CD (2003) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Keeping The Love Alive CD music
$13.69 Twenty seven years after it was compiled, the apocryphal Stompin' Room Only is finally released. The album, which suffers only from being the seam album between Marshall Tucker's tenures at Capricorn and Warner Bros, was recorded during the European tour in support of Carolina Dreams. Here are 11 tracks by the original band -- with guests on a few -- with two cuts from a Milwaukee 1974 show tacked on for good measure. This is Marshall Tucker as they have never been heard on record. Like the Allmans, the Tuckers were all about seamlessly expanding from one musical form into another. Whereas studio versions of "Can't You See," "Take the Highway," "Ramblin'," and "24 Hours at a time," would weave ...
| | Marshall Tucker Band New Life CD (1974) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Keeping The Love Alive music CDs
$10.89 Perhaps the only reason that New Life isn't quite as memorable as its self-titled predecessor is that the band's debut was just so startling when it appeared. By the time New Life was issued in 1974, to the band's credit, it seemed like the Marshall Tucker Band sound had always been a part of America's rock & roll scene. New Life is earthier than the first album, and country music is less layered over by the trappings of jam-band rock. "Blue Ridge Mountain Sky" is only eclipsed by Dickey Betts' "Ramblin' Man" as the ultimate road song from the period. Likewise, the pedal steel blues of "Too Stubborn" echo an earlier era altogether, as the ghost of Bob Wills comes into Toy Caldwell's songwriting. The whining guitars and lilting woodwinds of the title track bring the jazzier elements in the band's sound to the fore and wind them seamlessly ...
| | Marshall Tucker Band Searchin' For A Rainbow CD (1975) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Keeping The Love Alive songs
$10.69 With Searchin' for a Rainbow, The Marshall Tucker Band retreats somewhat from the grittier sounds of Where We All Belong ...
| | Marshall Tucker Band Tuckerized CD (1981) Remastered
Keeping The Love Alive album
$10.45
| | Goo Goo Dolls Jed CD (1989)
Keeping The Love Alive CD music
$12.35
| | Santana Between Good & Evil CD (1998)
Keeping The Love Alive music CDs
$5.95
| | Big Bad Voodoo Daddy Save My Soul CD (2003)
Keeping The Love Alive songs
$15.05 Includes an untitled hidden track following "Zig Zaggity Woop Woop Part Two".
For fifth studio album SAVE MY SOUL, retro-swingers Big Bad Voodoo Daddy take a detour through the Big Easy for a 10-pack of songs that wouldn't sound out of place being played in some seedy corner of the French Quarter. From the first note played, BBVD's horn section effectively becomes a Crescent City marching band on the raucous "Zig Zaggity Woop Woop," whose two parts bookend the album. In between, this swinging Gen-X septet ...
| | Slapshot Tear It Down CD (2005)
Keeping The Love Alive album
$11.09
| | Jim Dickinson Fishing With Charlie CD (2006)
Keeping The Love Alive CD music
$12.95
| | Clarence Rogers I Stayed Away (From The Lord Too Long) CD (2003)
Keeping The Love Alive music CDs
$14.79 Portfolio of a Singer/MusicianI am Clarence Rogers, and I started in music playing the piano at the early age of eleven. Inspired to play by my first cousin, Robert T. McGregor, four years later I was playing nightclubs. After hearing me play in several talent shows at East Highland High School where I attended, in Sylacauga, AL, Mr. J.M. Larkin, the school music and band director offered me a position to join his R&B band called "Snappy 7". We played such clubs as The Elks and the American Legion in Talladega, AL, where many Talladega College students would congregate. I also became a member of another band in my hometown of Sylacauga, called the Shandaleer's, which was later changed to Stanley Ford and The Shandaleer's. With this group I played at many nightclubs and events in Alabama. We were the house band for Supper Club 2728 in Birmingham, AL for more than 6 weeks where another renowned artist Clarence Carter (Slip Away, Patches) known as Clarence and Calvin back then, also performed. I played with these two groups (“Snappy 7” and the Shandaleer’s) until moving to Oregon in 1966. I sat in on many jam sessions at places around Portland such as The Cotton Club, Up and Downstairs, The Turquoise Room, Geneva's, Viewpoint, Fred's Place and gigs in Washington State. In 1968 I would form my own group called the Chandaleer's, which was one of the first, if not the first live band to open at Chet's Lounge, which was located on SW 4th Avenue, down town Portland. The members included Myrtle Warren, Pat Nelson, Penny Fonteno, Ray Nelson, Big Bob Traylor and Leroy Smith. In 1970 I became the organist for a group called AfterGlow, out of California. With this group I toured many cities in California, even playing the nation's largest air force base, Vanderberg Air force Base in Santa Maria, CA. We were also the house band for the Palm Garden Nightclub located on SE 30th and Powell Blvd in Portland, Oregon. Around 1971 I co-founded the group called Rated-X which was derived from my original group, The Chandaleer's. ...
| | Kill The Lights Buffalo Of Love CD (2007)
Keeping The Love Alive songs
$23.29
| | Ray Brown Something For Lester CD (2009) (Import) Japan; Limited Edition
Keeping The Love Alive album
$18.49
| | Jerky Boys All Time Greatest Bits CD (2007)
Keeping The Love Alive CD music
$14.69
|
|
|