| | Johnny Horton Legend CD Johnny Horton Discography of CDs
A fine introduction to the singer's brief but illustrious career, The Johnny Horton Legend compiles the chart-topping hits "The Battle of New Orleans," "When It's Springtime in Alaska (It's Forty Below)" and "North to Alaska" alongside seven other favorites. ~ Hank Small
Live Recording
Personnel: Johnny Horton (vocals).
Arranger: Johnny Horton.
Johnny Horton Legend Songs Legend Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Johnny Horton Legend CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Legend CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Johnny Horton 16 Biggest Hits CD (1999)
Legend album
$6.25
| | Johnny Horton Makes History CD (1960)
Legend CD music
$10.55
| | Rush - In Rio DVDs (2002) Widescreen; DTS Sound
Legend music CDs
$22.85 Rush take to the stage at the famous Maracana soccer stadium in Rio De Janiero, Brazil. Shot on November ...
| | Inuyasha - Vol. 23: Wicked Clutches DVD (2004)
Legend songs
$17.89 When 15 year-old Kagome Higurashi ...
| | Inuyasha - Vol. 24: Severed Identities DVD (2004)
Legend album
$17.89 When 15 year-old Kagome Higurashi falls down a well, she finds herself magically transported to medieval Japan, a place inhabited by demons and goblins. Here, she must search the countryside with the demon dog Inuyasha for the ...
| | Inuyasha - Vol. 30: Monkey Business DVD (2005)
Legend CD music
$19.09
| | Real Excello R&B CD (2002)
Legend music CDs
$16.95
| | Barnyard Playboys Corn Dog Love CD (2003)
Legend songs
$11.39 On the follow-up to Dumbass on a Rampage, New York's Barnyard Playboys offer up a refreshing new take to their country-tinged hard rock sound. Immediately showing off pop sensibilities not apparent on the disc's predecessor, Corn Dog Love kicks off with the simple, catchy title track. Quickly, though, the band returns to its brash, mind-in-the-gutter humor on the second track, "Turd in the Mail," although the song still shows a band quickly finding its feet, as the song is more compact, precise, and catchy than most of the group's debut. Favoring an acoustic approach on "Last Round" ...
| | Richard "Groove" Holmes On Basie's Bandstand CD (2003)
Legend album
$12.35 Some wags might claim there's already enough organ-based '60s soul-jazz in the Prestige catalog without throwing a previously unreleased album of the stuff on the bonfire. And your first inclination might be to dismiss this trio date, on which Richard "Groove" Holmes is joined by guitarist Gene Edwards and drummer George Randall, as more of the same old. However, though it does boast much of the expected characteristics of the Prestige sound, this live material, recorded at Count Basie's Lounge in Harlem on April 22, 1966, is above average and worth hearing. The sound quality's very good and fresh, but more importantly, the stripped-down trio arrangements boil the soul-jazz ...
| | George Jones 20 Original Greatest Hits CD (2004)
Legend CD music
$8.89
| | With Honor Heart Means Everything CD (2004)
Legend music CDs
$11.19
| | Hobart Smith In Sacred Trust: The 1963 Fleming Brown Tapes CD (2005)
Legend songs
$14.29 These intimate tracks featuring Hobart Smith playing banjo, guitar, fiddle, and piano were recorded in October, 1963 at Fleming Brown's home in Chicago, and while they were never intended for commercial release, they add up to a well-rounded portrait of this immensely talented old-timey musician. There doesn't seem to have been an instrument that Smith couldn't play (in addition to what he plays here, he also mastered accordion, harmonica, mandolin, and organ), and his repertoire ranged from sacred hymns and Tin Pan Alley classics to the blues and the Appalachian ballads he grew up hearing as a child, all of it delivered with an obvious joy and delight. Among the highlights here are a piano version of "Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss" (Smith is a rare example of a man who could play piano in a string band); a fiery and hard-charging rendition of "Cuckoo Bird," full of hammered and pulled notes on the banjo that Smith called "double-noting;" a slide guitar take on "John Henry," and the a cappella "I Feel So Good," probably best known in the version recorded by Big Bill Broonzy in 1941. Smith incorporated a 19th Century Afro-American feel into his banjo playing, which is apparent on the brief and lovely "I'll Meet You When the Sun Goes Down" (as well as on "Cuckoo Bird"), and his guitar playing drew heavily from the blues, as evidenced by the ...
| | Jim Jacobi In Strip Mall Land CD (2006)
Legend album
$12.65 Jim Jacobi has remained true to his mission of serving up some of the best garage punk music for over 25 years. His biting sarcasm and witty lyrics that cut to the bone complement his chunky, meaty guitar licks to perfection. Jim Jacobi began recording in 1977 and released what has been known as one of the first DIY (Do It Yourself) records, called Victims of the Media in 1978. This recording was picked up by Dead Kennedy's lead singer, Jello Biafra, who named his record label Alternative Tentacles as 'an antidote to the tentacles on the (Victims L.P.) cover'--possibly one of the first references to the word Alternative with music. Jacobi played all musical instruments on first L.P. and 1st 45 (1979) with the help of a drummer. He called this non-band Crap Detectors and had many ...
|
|
|