| | Jeffrey Steele Outlaw CD Jeffrey Steele Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Personnel: Gary Burnette, John Willis, Al Anderson, Scott Baggett, Steven Sheehan, B. James Lowry, Dave Cleveland (acoustic guitar); Pat Buchanan, Tom Bukovac (electric guitar); Russ Pahl (banjo); Jonathan Yudkin (cello); Bret Michaels (harmonica); Tim Aker, John Hobbs, Reese Wynans, Tony Harrell (keyboards); David Santo, Glenn Worf, Michael Rhodes , Steve Mackie (bass guitar); Chris McHugh, Greg Morrow, Steve Brewster, Chad Cromwell (drums); Danny Myrick, Dede Day Justine LeVasseur, Alex LeVasseur, Kip Raines, Tom Hambridge, Bekka Bramlett, KK Falkner (background vocals). Purchase Outlaw CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Rosanne Cash Rules Of Travel CD (2003)
Outlaw album
$11.29 RULES OF TRAVEL was nominated for the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album.
Rosanne Cash started out at the vanguard of progressive country in the late '70s, but although you can't have deeper roots in country music than Johnny Cash's eldest child, she always had a broader vision in mind. Her definitive farewell to country came with 1993's THE WHEEL and she hasn't looked back since. Only one more album popped out in the 10 years between that career milestone and RULES OF TRAVEL, but it sounds like it was time well spent.
With country ever further behind her, Cash goes down a deep, dark, introspective singer/songwriter path via dusky songs simmering with hurt, regret, and hard lessons learned. Cash's artful-but-not-pretentious ...
| | Lorrie Morgan Show Me How CD (2004)
Outlaw CD music
$12.69 It would be unkind to point out that Lorrie Morgan looks a little the worse for wear on the cover of Show Me How -- if she didn't do a song on that very subject on the album ("Now my idea of letting it all hang out/Sure has changed with time/And that's hard on a bombshell"), and if she didn't have a perfect right. So it's doubly a pleasure to find that Morgan sounds, at an age that usually takes its toll on the tight throats of female country vocalists, better than ever. Check out the perfectly controlled descent into baritone territory in "I Can Count on You," one of four songs here in which songwriter Angela Kaset, the creator of Morgan's mega-hit "Something in Red," had a hand. In other ways, too, Show Me How feels like ...
| | Clint Black Spend My Time CD (2004)
Outlaw music CDs
$14.45
| | Ricochet Live Album CDs (2004)
Outlaw songs
$12.89
| | Restless Heart Still Restless CD (2004)
Outlaw album
$9.55 Still Restless is the first album of all new studio material in 14 years by Restless Heart. Little has changed since their ...
| | Kathy Mattea Right Out Of Nowhere CD (2005)
Outlaw CD music
$12.75
| | Flatt & Scruggs Country Music Hall Of Fame: 1985 CDs (2000)
Outlaw music CDs
$8.25
| | Skunk Records Sampler, Fall 98 CD (1998)
Outlaw songs
$8.79
| | Joan Baez Noel CD (1966) Remastered
Outlaw album
$12.55 The 2001 remastered edition of NOEL features 6 bonus tracks and new cover art as well as a replica of the original cover and liner notes.
Originally released on Vanguard (79230). Includes original liner notes by Joan Baez and reissue liner notes by Peter Schickele.
An unexpectedly delightful collection of traditional Christmas carols, 1966's NOEL is one of a handful of Joan Baez albums arranged and produced by Peter Schickele--better known as comedic classical performer P.D.Q. Bach--during the mid-'60s. Even more than 1968's baroquely-orchestrated ...
| | Enemies Seize The Day CD (2002)
Outlaw CD music
$9.05
| | Tompall Glaser My Notorious Youth / Hillbilly Central #1 CD (2006) (Import) Reissue; Germany
Outlaw music CDs
$20.35 "Hillbilly Central" was the name of the studio Tompall Glaser ran after the disbandment of the Glaser Brothers in the mid-'70s. It was the portion of the shared assets that he earned in the fall-out and he set up camp there, continuing to record for MGM, turning into something like the outlaw's outlaw: the ornery renegade who ran on the fringes, providing a clubhouse with his studio -- Waylon Jennings and Billy Joe Shaver cut albums there -- earning respect instead of hits. Bear Family chronicles this time on their two-part 2005 reissue dubbed Hillbilly Central, providing the first CD reissues of his classic LPs for MGM and Polydor. The first volume, My Notorious Youth, contains 1973's Charlie and 1974's Take the Singer with the Song, transitional albums that eased Tompall out of the Glasers and onto his own winding path -- quite literally so in the case of Charlie which, according to Colin Escott's excellent liner notes (over the course of the two discs, they untangle a knotty past and tell a complete history), was initially billed to the Glaser Brothers. It may have carried their name but it was surely a showcase for Tompall, particularly his gift for worn, weary introspection and storytelling. Unlike the MGM albums that followed, Charlie had a hefty dose of Tompall originals, highlighted by the title track -- an account of a no-good bastard who leaves his family in the lurch -- the story song "Big Jim Colson," "Bad Bad Cowboy," and its bad-time companion "An Ode to My Notorious Youth (Barred from Every Honky Tonk)." His covers of three Kinky Friedman songs -- including a terrific "Sold American" -- are pitch-perfect complements, as is a starkly melancholy medley of country gospel standards "I'll Fly Away" and "I Saw the Light," which don't contradict the carousing as much as ...
| | Paul Lawler True Champissage: Indian Head Mssage CD (2006)
Outlaw songs
$14.49
| | Burke, Michael K & The Honkytonk Witchdoctors We Got Twang If You Want It CD (2008)
Outlaw album
$13.89 Michael K Burke is one of those lucky people that was raised in a household full of live music. His Dad played the guitar, the banjo and had a great voice. He grew up listening to all kinds of music performed by his father and all their hillbilly relatives. It was great for him living in L.A. during the 1950's and 60's, being able to watch TV shows such as Town Hall Party and Home Town Jamboree, which was California's answer to the Grand Ole Opry. He grew up listening to artists such as Johnny Cash, Lefty Frizzel, Tennesee Ernie Ford, Wanda Jackson and of course the Collins Kids. He remembers how great it was seeing a young kid like Larry Collins jumping around, dancing, and playing a double-neck guitar. This really caught his attention. Of course, when the 60's finally kicked in, artists such as Buffalo Springfield, Poco, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Jethro Tull, Merle Haggard, Joe South, Johnny Winters, and Roger Miller really widened his musical horizons; However it was a corny movie about Hank Williams that really got him thinking about who writes the songs, not just who sings them. His Dad showed him his first three chords on the guitar and almost immediately he began writing music. Around the age of 17, he had written quite a few songs and realized that it was something he had a knack for. When he was finally old enough to go to the bars and hear live music, he was surprised to find that for a lot of the people the music was only background noise. To him it was the song, it was the singer, and he just didnt get it. As he was driving home one night, he made a ...
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