| | Willy Deville Crow Jane Alley CD Willy Deville Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
It's hard to get a handle on what to call Willy DeVille's multi-genre music, though AMG writer Thom Jurek's description of "Spanish soul-inflected love songs" comes close. "Muddy Waters Rose Out of the Mississippi Mud" would be perfect for Rusty Kershaw, God rest his soul, a nice complement to the laid-back cover of Jay & the Americans' Top Three hit from 1964, "Come a Little Bit Closer" -- its presentation a wonderful nod to songwriters Wes Farrell and Bobby Hart. The evolution is startling 28 years after Mink DeVille gave listeners "Let Me Dream if I Want To" on the classic punk LP Live at CBGB's, and DeVille emerges as a major interpreter. The four minutes and 31 seconds of Bryan Ferry's "Slave to Love" may be one of the most distinct and unique adaptations of a Ferry tune put on record to date. Outside of the covers, the other eight tracks are Willy DeVille originals, "(Don't Have A) Change of Heart" liberally borrowing the melody from Kenny Rogers' hit "Lucille." "Trouble Comin' Every Day in a World" slinks and lurks around the corner with another stylistic change, sounding a bit like that other Willie from the same era, Bostonian Willie "Loco" Alexander. A sticker on the CD says "First studio album in 5 years!" -- though wasn't his previous "studio" disc (not including the live albums) Horse of a Different Color released in 2001? No matter; Crow Jane Alley is a very respectable collection from this journeyman, starting off with the single "Chieva" and continuing with DeVille's novel exploration of sound and clever merging of styles. ~ Joe Viglione
New Studio Album Feat. David Hidalgo,Joey Waronker
Personnel: Willy DeVille (vocals, acoustic guitar, slide guitar); Quetzal Flores (various instruments, jarana); John Sklair (guitar, 12-string guitar, E-bow); Martin "Baby Face" Arellano (acoustic guitar, trumpet); Lenin García (acoustic guitar); Diego "La Empanada" Arellano (guitarron); Michael Starr (mandolin, violin, strumstick); J. Mario Rodriguez (violin); Hook Herrera (harmonica); David Hidalgo (accordion); John Philip Shenale (piano, Wurlitzer piano, chord organ, chamberlin, synthesizer, ARP synthesizer, percussion, loops, sampler, unknown instrument); David Keyes (double bass, bass guitar); Joey Waronker, Steve Stevens (drums); Alex Acuña (cajon drums, castanets, cowbells, guiro, maracas, tambourine); Martha González (cajon drums); Castro Gonzalez, Augusto Cesar (unknown instrument); Billy Valentine, John Valentine (background vocals).
Uncut (p.124) - 3 stars out of 5 - "Drifters-scented barrio pop, booming melodrama and accordion-laced trysts are rendered with verve and sensitivity." Crow Jane Alley Music | List Price | $13.97 (You save $2.48) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, Blues, Oldies, New Wave | | Label | Eagle | | Orig Year | 2004 | | All Time Sales Rank | 27732  | | CD Universe Part number | 6770517 | | Catalog number | 20038 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Sep 21, 2004 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | John Philip Shenale | | Personnel | David Hidalgo - accordion Alex Acu±a - cajon drums, castanets, cowbells, guiro, maracas, tambourine Joey Waronker Steve Stevens - drums Michael Starr - mandolin, violin, strumstick John Philip Shenale - piano, Wurlitzer piano, chord organ, chamberlin, synthesizer, ARP synthesizer, percussion, loops, sampler, unknown instrument Willy Deville - vocals, acoustic guitar, slide guitar Hook Herrera - harmonica Billy Valentine John Sklair - guitar, 12-string guitar, E-bow
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Willy Deville Crow Jane Alley Songs Crow Jane Alley Music Review Purchase Crow Jane Alley CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Willy Deville Live In Berlin CDs (2003) Bonus Tracks
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Crow Jane Alley CD music
$16.45 If you are a music collector -- and with more that 2,000 LPs and approximately 4,000 CDs, I consider myself one -- you always pride yourself of having a few rare albums that are unknown to most music fans. Until a few weeks ago, I had one such piece in my collection. In 1990, my good friend, New York percussionist Alex DÃaz, produced a recording that was a masterpiece and used Tito Puente's orchestra as a musical backdrop. While this production never reached the general public -- and I called it "No Name" -- it was always a conversation piece. Over the years, there were many who listened to a DAT copy in my house who wondered how such a solid production had never made it into an official album.I asked Alex the same question many times. His answer was always the same: "Classics never die. It will come out when the time is right". Apparently the time is finally right. A.J. DÃaz who since leads Son de la Calle has just released it and the few who had the opportunity to preview it over the years can now join me: "It was about time".The participation of seasoned musicians like a very young Arturo Sandoval in perhaps his first recording in the United States, Mario Rivera, Hilton Ruiz, Chocolate Armenteros, Nicky Marrero, Papo Vázquez, Charlie Sepúlveda, Steve Berrios, Dave Hazeltine, Walter Booker, Bobby Carcassas, Sony Bravo, Phoenix Rivera, Johnny "Dandy" RodrÃguez, MartÃn Arroyo, Joe Santiago, Brian Lynch, and, of course "the King" Tito Puente, make this production ...
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