| | Cat Empire Two Shoes CD Cat Empire Discography of CDs
(5 Customer Reviews)
Recorded in Cuba with producer Jerry Boys---who has worked with, among others, R.E.M., Billy Bragg, and the Buena Vista Social Club--TWO SHOES is the sophomore album from Australian sextet Cat Empire.
Two Shoes, the second studio album from Melbourne, Australia's Cat Empire, was cut at the legendary Egrem Studio in Havava, Cuba -- the site of landmark recordings by the Buena Vista Social Club and countless other Cuban artists -- in just under a month in late 2004. Like their self-titled studio debut, Two Shoes was a massive success in the sextet's homeland, debuting at number one, and its word-of-mouth stoked an already expanding fan base in Europe and North America -- enough of one to nab the band a booking at Tennessee's prestigious Bonnaroo music festival in 2006 -- despite the lack of an American release. The fuss was justified: the Cat Empire is a wholly engaging, genre-splicing band that exudes equal parts musical intelligence and no-frills party-down exuberance. The Cuban influence is never far from the surface on Two Shoes, but neither is it the point of the Havana excursion. Primarily, the Latin brass blasts and percussion serve to accent rather than define the direction, and the well-crafted jazz piano runs that light up tracks such as "Sol y Sombra" come not from one of the Cuban guest musicians but from one of the band's founders, Oliver McGill. All of this talk of jazz and Cuba should not leave the impression that Two Shoes is an overly serious record, however. While a considerable percentage of the material, provided primarily by another co-founder, vocalist/percussionist Felix Riebl, as well as trumpeter Harry James Angus, ponders lofty thematic issues, much of it is whimsical: this is, after all, a group proud to include the lyric "Some nights I go to bed, there's a ghost in the air above my head and I tremble/Sometimes I eat KFC, other times I give up meat and I just eat lentils" into a song ("Protons, Neutrons, Electrons"). Skipping merrily from alt-rock crunch to hip-hop beats, landing on reggae/ska, Latin jazz, and points in between, Two Shoes is clever and brainy, danceable and absorbing. As for the "Special Edition" part of the title, that's where things get a little confusing. From the looks of it, a couple of tracks from the original Aussie release were dropped from this Canadian edition, but six tracks from the debut album were appended to it. The entire second disc is a DVD, consisting of a live show (love the French-language cover of the Eagles' "Hotel California") and four music videos. ~ Jeff Tamarkin
Top ten, debut album from Aussie band whose music is a fusion of reggae, hip-hop, jazz, swing, gypsy, ska, rock, & old-time dancehall. 13 tracks. Copy Controlled. Virgin. Cat Empire Two Shoes Songs | 1. | Sly | $0.99 | |
| 2. | In My Pocket | $0.99 | |
| 3. | Lullaby | $0.99 | |
| 4. | Car Song | $0.99 | |
| 5. | Two Shoes | $0.99 | |
| 6. | Miserere | |
| 7. | Sol y Sombra | $0.99 | |
| 8. | Party Started | $0.99 | |
| 9. | Protons, Neutrons, Electrons | $0.99 | |
| 10. | Salt Water | |
| 11. | Night That Never Ends | |
| Two Shoes Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)   I love Felix! The Cat Empire are the best band ever. They are so awesome!! Love em all so much!
Written by Casey Submitted by beagles_r_cute (Annex, CGGS) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Wrong Number of Tracks The album is awesome, beyond awesome. The best. But... there are only 13 tracks on it, there is no Feline track, number 7 is the Rhythm.
All the same, love the album. Submitted by Gerald (Earth) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Wicked Aussie band. These guys rule. Check out their newest album if you can get your hands on it. Cuban flavour with same Cat Empire style. Submitted by Erin (Toronto, Ontario Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
I like em I like em a lot Submitted by terdwiggler (Dearborn, MI, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Great Fun Music This is an amazing CD that has a little bit of everything. Great for parties or just chillin'. Submitted by skaking22 (Cheney, WA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Two Shoes CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | American Music Club Everclear CD (1991)
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| | Get Yer Boots On: The Best Of Slade CD (2004)
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| | Trembling Blue Stars Last Holy Writer CD (2007) (Import) United Kingdom
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| | David & Steve Gordon Garden Of Serenity CD (1992)
Two Shoes album
$13.25 Not surprisingly, the goal of each movement is to bring peace and tranquility to the listener. This is music that can be used for meditation, dozing off, or practicing yoga, Tai Chi, Pilates and other like-minded activities. Both "1st Movement - Secret Foundation" and "2nd Movement - Nature Spirits" envelop the listener with a warm sonic blanket. Moreover, this album transcends the traditional boundaries of "music" or "song." Instead, it may best be defined as sound design. With a little imagination, GARDEN OF SERENITY will transform ...
| | Small Faces CD (1996)
Two Shoes CD music
$10.65 This late-1960s outing by the revered British rock band the Small Faces includes "Feeling Lonely," "Green Circles," and "All Our Yesterdays."
Small Faces was the second LP of that name issued by the band in the space of a year, a fact that -- coupled with its release a year later in America in somewhat modified form as There Are But Four Small Faces -- has always confused fans of the group's work. This particular album was the Small Faces' Immediate Records debut, and caught the group in the transition from an R&B-based mod band into a psychedelic-oriented outfit. They were still finding their way along the trail from sweaty, soul-drenched James Brown- and Otis Redding-inspired covers and originals to flower-power trippiness, and the short running time and the relative lack of Steve Marriott lead vocals (Ronnie Lane is out front on three of the 14 numbers, in addition to the presence of an instrumental) reveal that they were still laboring to find a sound and a collective voice with which they were comfortable, amid other activities (lots of gigs plus playing on other artists' work as the unofficial Immediate Records house band). The short running time didn't prevent this from being a pretty imposing album, however, especially in its original British edition. "(Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me" would probably have been a single but for the fact that Steve Marriott and producer Andrew Oldham gave it away to a quartet of Small Faces admirers called the Apostolic Intervention -- no matter, for it made a strong album opener and a great lead-in to "Something I Want to Tell You" and the ballad "Feeling Lonely," which slides into the heavier-weight instrumental rocker "Happy Boys Happy," which showcases Ian McLagan's keyboards and Kenney Jones' drums. "My Way of Giving" was a superb soul shouter that could have been a B-side in the group's earlier phase, but the real treat is the bejeweled, soaring, spaced-out dream account of "Green Circles," with its beautiful lead piano and exquisitely spacy choruses, leading to a tough, crunchy-textured bridge and finale. Side two opened with "Become Like You," a trippy acoustic guitar-dominated psychedelic ballad, ...
| | Liz Damon's Orient Express CD (1971)
Two Shoes music CDs
$16.29 "1900 Yesterday" is as classic a slice of middle-of-the-road/adult contemporary music as you'll find, and the hit single is up there with Ray Conniff's Top Ten 1966 hit, "Somewhere My Love" ("Lara's Theme" from the film Dr. Zhivago is a superb example of the genre). Indeed, Liz Damon's group of three frontwomen and six male musicians sounds as enamored of Ray Conniff and his sound as Ric Ocasek and the Cars were of the Velvet Underground. The Cashman & West song "But for Love" is brilliant, more edge than you might find on an album by the Lettermen, while "You Make Me Feel Like Someone" could have fallen off the first Ronettes album, no joke. Ben Wood's liner notes say this is the band's album debut, and yes, they are lined up in some Holiday Inn-type venue on the back, empty tables and chairs, some people crowded up front -- it's bar band schmaltz, with something here nonetheless. Producer George J.D. Chun put together some sterling work at Annex Studio in Los Angeles and Commercial Recording in the group's hometown of Honolulu. "Bring Me Sunshine" hails back to Connie Francis' early-'60s pop. Keep in mind that this is only four years after Conniff's smash and about seven years since the lengthy reign of Queen Connie. The record is absolutely delightful if you consider the strange combination of genres -- girl group meets middle-of-the-road. The sounds are not strange bedfellows, it's just that for the time this was the antithesis of hip, though that hit single keeps coming back -- as wonderful a tune as the Five Stairsteps' "O-o-h Child," albeit lighter, much lighter.
And yes, the Beatles covers are pure Lettermen; "Something" features the gals backing up the guys with Supremes-type chirps, as does "Let It Be," but it is more palatable than an album like Hugo Montenegro's Dawn of Dylan. Cutting "Let It Be" and "Something" may have been the popular thing at the time; decades later that certain collectibility garnered by Beatles covers puts this album into another league. The guitar solo to "Something" is pretty interesting, as the bar band emerges from the slick adult contemporary sound for a moment, and it is very cool. It's interesting to note that a latter-day version of H.P. Lovecraft known simply as Lovecraft had the same Holiday Inn look, but that band issued a Latin rock sound instead of this frothy stuff. "You're Falling in Love" is a good little tune for Damon's voice, and had she a Phil Spector or a John Farrar to bring her to the heights reached by Olivia Newton-John and Ronnie Spector, she could have held a chanteuse crown for a while. "Everything Is Beautiful" ...
| | Shades Of Al Green CD (2004) (Import) United Kingdom
Two Shoes songs
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| | NQC Live 6 CD (2007)
Two Shoes album
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| | Blessed Be His Name CD (2008)
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