| | Dwayne Sodahberk Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity CD Dwayne Sodahberk Discography of CDs
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Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity Music Dwayne Sodahberk Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity Songs Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity Review
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Purchase Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Gravenhurst Flashlight Seasons CD (2004)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity album
$9.75
| | Piano Magic Disaffected CD (2005)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity CD music
$11.09 Although two exceptional EPs came out between The Troubled Sleep of Piano Magic and Disaffected, an entire year passed -- for the first time since Piano Magic's inception -- without an album-length release. (Piano Magic say this is their sixth proper album, meaning they're probably not counting the Son de Mar score and the two-song A Trick of the Sea.) Glen Johnson's group returns as inspired as ever, turning in a work that matches and occasionally exceeds Low Birth Weight and Artists' Rifles. Some of their other albums have suffered from mild to acute stray-idea syndrome, but they've found a way here to bundle up a number of disparate approaches while keeping it all focused and linear. The most striking songs on the album are "Disaffected" and "Deleted Scenes," where the usual (some might say redundant) round of Factory and 4AD inspirations shifts to the likes of Section 25 ("Looking for a ...
| | Sufjan Stevens Illinois CD (2005)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity music CDs
$12.25 The second entry from sui generis singer/songwriter Sufjan Stevens in his absurdly ambitious project to make a record for every state in America outdistances even 2003's superb GREETINGS FROM MICHIGAN in scope and beauty. A sweeping paean to the Lincoln state, ILLINOIS weaves together history, personal confession, and detail-filled scenarios with chamber folk, expansive orchestral pop, and back-porch pastoral settings for a stunningly progressive indie gem that sound like Brian Wilson, Stereolab, and Neil Young holding hands in heaven.
Remarkably, ...
| | CocoRosie Noah's Ark CD (2005)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity songs
$12.89
| | Beirut Gulag Orkestar CD (2006)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity album
$10.79
| | Benjamin Wetherill Laura CD (2008)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity CD music
$11.45
| | Thelonious Monk Monk CD (1954)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity music CDs
$9.95 As was often the case during the early days of jazz recordings, these six selections (seven, if you count the two attempts at "Think of One") were released under a myriad of names, among them WE SEE, THE GOLDEN MONK, and simply MONK--with the assembled musicians credited as the Thelonious Monk Quintet. Monk can be heard supported by two distinct outfits during these, his respective second and third outings as a bandleader on the Prestige label. Taken chronologically, "Let's Call This" and both versions of "Think of One" were documented on November 13, 1953, with Monk (piano), Sonny Rollins (tenor sax), Julius Watkins (French horn), Percy Heath (bass), and Willie Jones (drums). The other four cuts come from a confab involving Monk, Frank Foster (tenor sax), Ray Copeland (trumpet), Curly Russell (bass), and Art Blakey (drums) circa May 11, 1954.
Parties familiar with Monk and Rollins' individual work from around the same era can attest that "Think of One" never really jells, even though Rollins and Watkins turn in well above average performances. The fact that there were two separate attempts at the piece points to the presumption that the musicians weren't totally satisfied--but they shouldn't be considered as disposable, either, as Monk keeps the proceedings lively and is certainly in sync with the band (particularly Rollins, with whom he shares an innate rhythmic sense). The results of the subsequent date are comparatively solid throughout, with Monk and company demonstrating their ability to vacillate between the ultra-sublime update of "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" and the hardcore bop of "Locomotion" and "Hackensack." Those interested in locating all of Monk's recordings during his tenure on Prestige--including the rest of the November 1953 session--should check out THE COMPLETE PRESTIGE RECORDINGS (2000) box set.
Featuring three takes of two originals from a quintet date with Sonny Rollins, plus three originals and a standard from a quintet date with drummer Art Blakey, MONK rounds out the pianist's output for the Prestige label. At this time Monk was prevented from working New York clubs due to the suspension of his cabaret card; given that fact, the palpable joy of these sessions is miraculous.
Monk's tart transformation of "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" employs a canny dissonance and bent note to set up the horns' entrance, ...
| | Courtney Pine Closer To Home CD (1992)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity songs
$10.09
| | Copeland Beneath Medicine Tree CD (2003)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity album
$11.39
| | Godhead Non-Stop Ride CD (2004)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity CD music
$12.35
| | True North Somewhat Similar CD (2004)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity music CDs
$12.95 Recording information: Goldentone Studios.
| | Jo Mama/J Is For Jump CDs (2005) Reissued
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity songs
$13.59
| | Anne Ducros Piano, Piano CD (2006)
Partying Without Inhibition Or Dignity album
$12.99 There is little information about European jazz singer Anne Ducros within the liner notes to Piano, Piano, but she clearly endeared herself to each of the four guest pianists with whom she worked on her CD. She soars in the lush setting of "Never Let Me Go," where she packs an emotional punch, though her tripping over a few words slightly handicaps her interpretation of Billie Holiday's "God Bless the Child." ...
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