| | Dilermando Reis Toca Pixinguinha CD - Import Dilermando Reis Discography of CDs
This album from the late Brazilian classical guitarist Dilermando Reis includes "Lamentos" and "Segura Ele."
Album now available from the Choro artist. Dilermando Reis Toca Pixinguinha Music Dilermando Reis Toca Pixinguinha Songs | 1. | Carinhoso |
| 2. | Lamentos |
| 3. | Cheguei |
| 4. | Ingenuo |
| 5. | Os Cinco Companheiros |
| 6. | Vou Vivendo |
| 7. | Naquele Tempo |
| 8. | Chorei |
| 9. | Cochichando |
| 10. | Segura Ele |
| 11. | Urubatan |
| 12. | As Proezas Do Solon |
| Dilermando Reis Toca Pixinguinha Review
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$13.05 The greatest sin of the folks at Chiswick Records was poor timing. 1975 wasn't a bad time to start a record label in Great Britain, especially if you wanted to release music that would shake things up a bit, but in their window of time they ended up catching the tail-end of the fading pub rock phenomenon and missing out on the first wave of punk, leaving them stranded somewhere in the middle. (It's fitting that Chiswick released a single by Joe Strummer's early band the 101'ers, but Strummer broke up the group to form the Clash before it came out.) But Chiswick did manage to put out some good, tough rock and roll records during their first years of existence, and Fool's Gold: Chiswick Chartbusters, Vol.1 (originally released as a label sampler in 1977) collects 12 great tunes from the short-lived era when it looked like Dr. Feelgood could be the band to save British rock. Along with the fine A-side of that 101'ers single, Fool's Gold offers up three righteous selections from short-lived R&B mavens the Count Bishops, an equal number from the goofy but energetic Gorillas, two sides from surprisingly powerful French rockers Little Bob Story, the engagingly sleazy "Dirty Pictures" by the Radio Stars, and some passionate neo-rockabilly courtesy Rocky Sharpe & the Razors. Everything here is in the pub rock tradition of no-frills roots rock, the more American the better, but there's plenty here that grooves hard, and it offers a potent reminder that the punks weren't the only ones who thought rock & roll needed a swift kick in the butt in the mid-'70s. Good fun throughout, and points added ...
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