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The Radiators have been one of New Orleans' premier party bands since the 1970s, with their yearly gig at the New Orleans Jazz Festival inevitably bringing down the house. After decades of playing together with an intact lineup, the members of the Radiators have developed a remarkable musical empathy. On their self-titled album, the band show they can both play tightly and let it flow like the jam band they're sometimes pegged as. The polyrhythmic "Deep in My Voodoo" kicks off The Radiators, then the album continues with a survey of adult alternative styles: from the straightforward roots rock of "I Don't Speak Love" to the spooky ballad "These Fugitive Dreams" (which sounds like an outtake from Bruce Springsteen's The River) to the frat-rock closer "Untouched by Human Hands." The Radiators is an enjoyable listen from start to finish, but that's all it is. It's the sound of craftmasters playing songs so derivative of others, they may as well be playing cover songs. On an album, that's a big problem, but these songs undoubtedly sound more exciting live. ~ Mark Morgenstein
Additional personnel includes: Michael Skinkus (percussion); Theresa Andersson, Tommy Malone, Johnny Malone (background vocals).
Recorded at Nothing Studios, New Orleans, Louisiana and Ardent Studios, Memphis, Tennessee.
Engineers include: Chris Polacheck, Nigel Wiesehan, Pete Matthews.
Personnel: Dave Malone (vocals, guitar); Ed Volker (vocals, keyboards); Camile Baudoin (guitar); Frank Bua (drums); Theresa Andersson (tambourine, background vocals); Michael Skinkus (percussion); John Malone, Tommy Malone (background vocals).
Recording information: Nothing Studios, New Orleans, LA.
The Radiators: Dave Malone (vocals, guitar); Ed Volker (vocals, keyboards); Camile Baudoin (guitar); Reegie Scanlon (bass); Frank Bua (drums).
Radiators Review
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Purchase Radiators CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Allman Brothers Band Dreams CDs (1989) Box Set
Radiators 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' history, thus attracting buyers seeking the ultimate hits package, and including enough unreleased tracks and rarities to appeal to the band's most devoted fans. As a result, DREAMS is neither the definitive Allman Brothers collection nor the gift to hardcore ...
| | Ozark Mountain Daredevils Car Over The Lake Album CD (1975)
Radiators CD music
$13.85 The Ozark Mountain Daredevils' third album for A&M continues their good-natured Southern chooglin' with hints of a newfound mid-70s AM pop vibe. Although it was recorded in Nashville, The Car Over the Lake Album has a distinctly Californian vibe on several tracks, particularly those written and sung by drummer Larry Lee, whose contributions could ride along "Ventura Highway" with any of America's recordings. Despite this warm Beach Boys influence, the album is still a Southern rocker, evident on "Keep on Churning," "Leatherwood," and the slightly goofy "Gypsy Forest." The hard-rockin' push of "If You Want to Get to Heaven" is nowhere to be found on this album, but the laid-back porch-sittin' hum of "From Time to Time" and the spectacular "If I Only Knew" acts as an acceptable substitute. ~ Zac Johnson
The Ozark Mountain Daredevils' third album for A&M continues their good-natured Southern chooglin' ...
| | Little Feat Kickin' It At The Barn CD (2003)
Radiators music CDs
$13.59 Kickin' It at the Barn is Little Feat's first album for their own indie label, Hot Tomato Records, which makes more of a difference than you might think. In his liner notes for the album, guitarist/vocalist Paul Barrére said they called the album Kickin' It at the Barn because it captures the band laying back and relaxing while recording at bandmember Fred Tackett's home studio, the Barn, and that's exactly what the album sounds like -- it's relaxed and warm, sounding more comfortable and lived-in than such otherwise likeable latter-day efforts as Chinese Work Songs. That vibe is welcome and pleasurable, notably different than some of their platters for CMC, and that alone would separate this from other Feat albums of a recent vintage, but there are also some ventures into different sounds and styles, such as "Corazones y Sombras," which is a dead ...
| | American Flyer/Spirit Of A Women CD (2004)
Radiators songs
$12.49 Originally released on United Artists. Includes liner notes by Richie Unterberger.
American Flyer has long been a favorite of singer/songwriter, L.A. country-rock, and '70s soft rock aficionados, partially because of the group's supergroup status, but chiefly because the music they made was very, very good. That pedigree was indeed impressive, with the four members consisting of former Pure Prairie League member Craig Fuller, Eric Kaz of the Blues Magoos, Doug Yule of the Velvet Underground, and Steve Katz, formerly of Blood, Sweat & Tears -- maybe not Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young in terms of marquee name recognition, but surely a collection of gifted and respected singer/songwriters who complemented each other nicely. While they had some modest success with their George Martin-produced 1976 eponymous debut, they had a difficult time breaking into a larger ...
| | Bonnie Raitt Souls Alike CD (2005)
Radiators album
$9.99 Well into the fourth decade of Bonnie Raitt's recording career, SOULS ALIKE finds the beloved vocalist/guitarist showing no signs of slowing down. In fact, this 2005 album marks the first time that Raitt produced her own record (with assistance from longtime associate Tchad Blake), allowing her a new level of creative input.
The most significant change on SOULS ALIKE is its lack of overtly bluesy numbers. Although Raitt's emotive singing and guitar playing almost always feature an element of the blues, that vibe is downplayed here in favor of a mellower rock atmosphere exemplified by opening track "I Will Not Be Broken," a ...
| | Eddie Jefferson Jazz Singer CD (1965)
Radiators CD music
$10.15 Recorded in New York between 1959 and 1965. Includes liner notes by Leonard Feather.
Before Lambert, Hendricks and Ross, and long before the Manhattan Transfer, there was Eddie Jefferson, a pioneer of vocalese--the practice of putting words to melodies based on instrumentalists' recorded jazz solos. THE JAZZ SINGER, reissued here by Evidence, is a classic slice of Jefferson's art, including some of his most memorable interpretations. Among them are his renditions of Miles Davis's "So What," Coleman Hawkins's "Body and Soul," and Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time." Jefferson is backed here by a vocal trio (they add accents and embellishments) and full band (including ...
| | Union Of A Man & A Woman Sound Of The Union Of A Man & A Woman CD (1998)
Radiators music CDs
$12.49
| | Sorts Hawaiian Bronco CD (1999)
Radiators songs
$13.09
| | Alphaville Breathtaking Blue CD (1989) (Import) Import; Argentina
Radiators album
$15.75 Originally released in 1989, this third effort from the synth-pop band Alphaville (best known for the single "Forever Young") was produced by Klaus Schulze, previously of Tangerine Dream.
The Breathtaking Blue was a somewhat disappointing follow-up to Alphaville's early-1980s records Forever Young and Afternoons in Utopia. It lacked the shimmering standout quality of songs like "Big in Japan," "Forever Young" and "Afternoons in Utopia." The production, by Klaus Schulze ...
| | Searchers At The Starclub CD (1994) (Import) Germany
Radiators CD music
$22.55
| | Gary Farr Addressed To The Censors Of Love CD (1972)
Radiators music CDs
$10.45
| | Afrobutt Wunderbutt CD (2009)
Radiators songs
$15.15
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