| | Ronnie Milsap Live CD Ronnie Milsap Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
Recorded live at the Biloxi Grand Theatre, Biloxi Mississippi. Includes liner notes by Angela Land and Al McManus.
Personnel includes: Ronnie Milsap (vocals); Jamie Brantley (acoustic & electric guitars, background vocals); Rhonda Hampton (acoustic guitar, background vocals); Bob Mann (electric guitar); Catherine Styron Marx (piano); Adam Hampton (keyboards, background vocals); Jim Ferguson, Warren Gower (bass, background vocals); Rodney Edmondson (drums).
Purchase Live CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Johnny Otis 1945-1947 CD (2002)
Live album
$18.05 Growing up among Afro-Americans in Berkeley, CA, Greek-American Johnny Otis (born John Veliotes) always identified strongly with people of color. Before he had attained the age of 20 he was gigging with black jazz bands throughout the Southwest, and eventually organized an ensemble deliberately patterned after Count Basie's orchestra. This highly charged album of historical musical artifacts documents the very beginning of Johnny Otis' recording career. With one apparently unobtainable exception, the Classics Blues & Rhythm Series has assembled all of Otis' Excelsior recordings, made in Los Angeles between 1945 and 1947. This provides background and context for his more well-known Savoy ...
| | Philly Steps: Phila-La Of Soul & Arctic Records Remixed Hits CD (2004)
Live CD music
$14.69 Jamie/Guyden Dist. Co. celebrates its 50th anniversary by celebrating the artists and musicians of its past with contemporary remixes by Paul Simpson and Tom Moulton of the labels' classic hits like "Yes, I'm Ready" by Barbara Mason and "Waitin for the Rain" by the Fantastic Johnny C. Paul ...
| | J J Jackson But It's Alright CD (1967)
Live music CDs
$9.95 Soul belter J.J. Jackson is best known for his 1967 smash, "But It's Alright," but he has some fine singles and a couple of excellent albums as well, and 1967's But It's Alright on the Calla label is one of them. Kicking off with the infectious title track, the record alternates between flat-out rockers like "I Dig Girls," "Come See Me (I'm Your Man)" (which was written by Jackson, covered by the Pretty Things, and then reclaimed powerfully here), and "Boogaloo Baby," midtempo groovers like ...
| | Alexis Korner Kornerstoned: Anthology 1958-1983 CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Live songs
$24.79
| | B B King Mr. Blues/Confessin' The Blues CD (2005) (Import) Remastered; United Kingdom
Live album
$18.79 This CD contains B.B. King's first ABC-Paramount studio efforts -- Mr. Blues (1962) and Confessin' the Blues (1965), respectively. While there are inevitable similarities between the projects, offering them back-to-back allows listeners an acute sense of King's rapid maturation and development during what was by all accounts the nexus of the guitarist/vocalist's career. The dozen-song Mr. Blues was a haphazard start for King with the contents taken from three different recording sessions in a 13-month period (March 1, 1962 through April 11, 1963). Based on the results, the artist was being presented as a blues shouter, supported by an antiquated big band and/or orchestra. Arguably the best of the lot comes from the Maxwell Davis led ensemble on the first of several Big Joe Turner tunes, the Ahmet Ertegun penned "Chains of Love." The upgrade of Ivory Joe Hunter's "Blues at Midnight" ...
| | Keith Urban CD (1999)
Live CD music
$10.15 "Rollercoaster" was nominated for the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance.
Keith Urban is Australian, but listening to his debut self-titled solo CD, you'd swear he was raised somewhere south of the Mason-Dixon line. Just as the Beatles mimicked the American accents of their musical heroes, Urban, the former leader of the group the Ranch, adopts the twang of the country stars he heard growing up Down Under. Urban's brand of country includes soulful vocals; a nice mix of acoustic and steel guitars, banjo, fiddles, and mandolins; and some fine songwriting, from Urban, Steve Wariner, and even two former members of the Go-Gos's (!) The subject here, with few exceptions, is love in all its aspects, from the hooky opening cut, "It's a Love Thing," to the gorgeous ballad "Your Everything," to the Cajun stomp of "I Wanna Be Your Man (Forever)." Urban's excellent guitar playing throughout the CD is tasteful and understated, but adds immeasurably to the arrangements. When he really cuts loose, on the instrumental "Rollercoaster," you can hear why acts like the Dixie Chicks and Garth Brooks tapped him to play on their CDs. Overall, KEITH URBAN offers a taste of what this talented singer, songwriter, and guitarist might do in the future.
Principally recorded at Javelina Recording Studios, ...
| | Hank Williams 40 Greatest Hits CDs (1978)
Live music CDs
$22.09 Those seeking a definitive introduction to Hank Williams Sr.'s music need look no further than 40 GREATEST HITS, a beautifully ...
| | Bright Eyes Fevers And Mirrors CD (2000)
Live songs
$9.75 While 2002's LIFTED was the record that blew Bright Eyes and its hyper-poetic frontman, Conor Oberst, into the public's consciousness and up the Billboard charts, its predecessor, FEVERS ...
| | Tony Moran Maze CD (2003)
Live album
$13.49
| | No Speed Limit Sweet Virginia CD (2006)
Live CD music
$13.99
| | Little Chibi Irie & Smile CD (Import)
For Sale Pre-Order Now! Release Date Not Determined
$36.79 | | Cafe Antarsia Ensemble Songs Of The Table CD (2007)
Live music CDs
$12.09
| | Stanton Warriors Stanton Sessions, Vol. 3 CD (2008)
Live songs
$15.05 Pioneers of the nu skool breaks genre and still going strong, Bristol-based Dominic Butler and Mark Yardley are back with a third volume in their Stanton Sessions series (named after their regular event at London's Fabric club). The program is a nice blend of the familiar (Plump DJs, DJ Icey, Chemical Brothers, Too Short) and the somewhat more obscure (Chromeo, Tony Senghores, D-Lirium). Butler and Yardley show particular affection for offbeat hip-hop: cheeky rappers Yo Majesty open ...
| | Regenerated Headpiece New Animal CD (2009)
Live album
$10.65 THE STORY OF REGENERATED HEADPIECEIn reviews of their first two albums, Rat Race Vacation and Dogfight, New York City’s Regenerated Headpiece (or RHP) was described as everything from “old school” to “futuristic”, and compared to recording artists ranging from A Tribe Called Quest to “Weird” Al Yankovic. But perhaps RapReviews.com said it best when, in their favorable review of Rat Race Vacation, they wrote: “Regenerated Headpiece brings a style of lyrics and beats that doesn't sound a whole lot like anything else.”RHP’s unique music has captured worldwide attention, garnering reviews and interviews in five languages. Rat Race Vacation was released to encouraging notices from magazines like Vice, Elemental, Hip Hop Connection (UK) and Insomniac, while Dogfight was named one of the year’s top 10 albums by New York Newsday and received praise from magazines like Future Music (UK) and Smooth. It also caught the ear of writer Robert Lanham who, in his bestseller The Hipster Handbook, listed RHP as a “Newer Band Kicking Some Ass This Decade” alongside acts like EL-P and RJD2.Now Regenerated Headpiece is proud to announce the release of their third album, The New Animal. This 14-song album displays RHP at their very best, with songs that vary from serious to the absurd, traditional to experimental and back again. And, as a special bonus, The New Animal includes two songs featuring their old friend and supporter of many years, the legendary ...
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