| | Golden Earring Naked Truth CD Golden Earring Discography of CDs
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Purchase Naked Truth CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Thin Lizzy Shades Of A Blue Orphanage CD (1972) Germany
Naked Truth
$9.79 A fascinating, all-over-the-map album by a band that hadn't yet found its own voice (although in retrospect hints of the band's ultimate direction can be heard here). Things get off to a roaring start with "The Rise and Dear Demise of the Funky Nomadic Tribes," which segues from Yes-derived staccato unison riffing into a funk-guitar workout influenced by Jimi Hendrix and James Brown. From there it's on to "Buffalo Gal," a melancholy ...
| | Thin Lizzy Vagabonds Of The Western World CD (1973)
Naked Truth
$10.59 VAGABONDS OF THE WESTERN WORLD is not only the last record that Thin Lizzy recorded as a trio, but an album that signaled the band's adoption of a more hard-rock sound and an abandonment of its prior harder-edged prog-rock approach. VAGABONDS also contained Thin Lizzy's breakthrough hit, a modern update of the traditional folk song "Whisky in the Jar."
Once again turning to his Irish heritage, Phil Lynott reaches into Celtic mythology to create a wayfaring fictional character who traverses through a mystical world, a character who appears in the Hendrixian title track, and in the moody "Hero and the Madman." On the later, Lynott's spoken-word intro sounds not unlike something Jim Morrison might have written. When Lynott isn't relying upon magical beings for inspiration, his songs speak from the perspective of the perpetual outsider. Throughout the album, the band demonstrates its mastery ...
| | J Geils Band J. Geils Band CD (1970)
Naked Truth
$8.39 If you were to compare the J. Geils Band's 1970 self-titled debut to their final album with singer Peter Wolf, 1981's FREEZE FRAME, you could easily be fooled into thinking they were two completely different bands. Although they'd later become best known for chart-storming pop-rock, the J. Geils Band started out as ...
| | Mike Bloomfield Super Session CD (1968) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Naked Truth
$6.75 A surprise best-seller when it was first released, this mostly improvised pairing of singer/keyboardist/producer Al Kooper with two major guitar heroes of the day sounds fascinating all these years later precisely because of the distance of time--nobody makes records like this any more. The material runs the gamut from folk pop (covers of Donovan and Dylan), to blues ("Albert's Shuffle," "You Don't Love Me"), to heady jams ("His Holy Modal Majesty"), to big-band jazz ("Harvey's Tune").
All the tunes make effective templates for the kind off-the-cuff music-making that in less capable hands might have resulted in simple noodling. In fact, although Bloomfield and Stills don't play together on any of the cuts (Bloomfield played on one side of the original LP, Stills on the other), all three principals get off lots of good licks and producer Kooper has some interesting tricks up his sleeve, as in the over-the-top phasing he lavishes on "You Don't Love Me." The only real disappointment here is that Stills, a far better singer than Kooper, never opens his mouth.
Those familiar with the Live Adventures album ...
| | Henry Paul CD (1982)
Naked Truth
$10.49 By 1982, Henry Paul was completely devoid of musical direction, let alone inspiration. After issuing a truly fine album in Anytime a year before, Paul decided on yet another musical change in direction. On his eponymously titled final album for Atlantic before re-forming the Outlaws, Paul took the hard boogie stance of Feel the Heat and married it to pop hooks à la Boston, Loverboy, and Styx, making for a truly disastrous finale. The shrill edges in the vocals seem to be trying to get something out of Bruce Springsteen's mileage as well. But the choruses on "Nightline" are right off of Styx's Grand Illusion and Pieces of Eight albums. Synthesizers careen into incredibly shattering -- yet compressed -- power chords; the guitars and drums are more filtered through effects than they ...
| | Waysted Harsh Reality CD (2007) (Import) Import
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$20.99
| | Gentlemen Of Leisure CD (2001)
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$14.69 It seems like these fellows might have had a better chance of getting noticed 15 to 20 years prior to the release of this 2001 album. Still, as '80s-sounding synth pop goes, this is respectable, primarily because the quirky, sometimes jittery songs are fairly tuneful. While the production is electro-mechanistic, it's minimal enough (perhaps because only Karl Heinz plays any instruments or does any programming) that it's not overbearing. They sing effectively ...
| | Golden Oldies Vol. 7: Greatest Rock N' Roll Hits 50'S & 60'S CD (1989)
Naked Truth
$6.49 Original Sounds' Golden Oldies series presents great hits from the '60s and '70s as performed by the original artists. Though the discs are extremely brief at only ten songs and are randomly sequenced, they are exciting reminders of just how good music could be during that "golden" era. Vol. 7 is culled from the '60s and takes a somewhat harder rocking approach than many of the other sets in the series, with the inclusion of tracks ...
| | Geoff Farina Blobscape CD (2002)
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$12.55
| | Pato Fu Ao Vivo MTV CD (2002)
Naked Truth
$16.65 The Belo Horizonte-based quartet Pato Fu is often compared to the '60s cult band Os Mutantes. But although Pato Fu is clearly inspired by the psychedelic pioneers of that group, they are by no means near reaching ...
| | MR E Planet E CD (2004)
Naked Truth
$6.69
| | Chicchi Powdersky CD (2006)
Naked Truth
$7.49
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