| | Rob Thomas Something To Be CD Rob Thomas Discography of CDs
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This release, produced by Matt Serletic, is the first solo album by the former lead singer of matchbox 20. 12 audio tracks are included bplus 20 minutes of behind-the-scenes footage, and bonus song.
This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other. Personnel: Rob Thomas (vocals, piano); Heitor Teixeira Pereira, Jeff Trott, John Mayer , Mike Campbell , Wendy Melvoin, Kevin Kadish (guitar); Hasan Isakkut (kanun); Dan Willis (duduk); Frank London (shofar); Brandon Fields (saxophone); Gary Grant (trumpet); Reginald Young (trombone); Matt Serletic (keyboards); Mike Elizondo (bass guitar); Gerald Heyward (drums); Greater Anointing, Anika Ellis, Cassidy (background vocals). Since Matchbox Twenty is a faceless group, recognizable for its hits rather than its image, it's easy to assume that the band is nothing more than a solo project in disguise for its frontman, lead singer and chief songwriter Rob Thomas (who should not be confused with Rob Thomas, the creator of UPN's 2005 cult TV series Veronica Mars). Not only is he prominent in the band's videos and press, but he scored the biggest hit of his career with "Smooth," a song he penned and sung for Santana's 1999 comeback, Supernatural. Even though Matchbox Twenty's 1996 debut, Yourself or Someone Like You, was a big hit and spawned four radio hits, "Smooth" was bigger than any of them, making Thomas famous, if not exactly a star. Instead of striking out for a solo career in 2000, he returned to his band, releasing Mad Season that year and More Than You Think You Are two years later. While both records had different moods -- the former was polished and radio-ready, the latter hit a little harder -- both found Thomas working as part of a unit, not as a flashy frontman. This may have illustrated how Matchbox Twenty worked as a band; in particular, More Than You Think You Are sounded like the work of a driven, cohesive unit, even the songs weren't quite up to snuff -- but they also had to sound a little workmanlike, and certainly not the product of the savvy cross-cultural crossover creator of "Smooth." Given the relatively lackluster reception of More Than You Think You Are, the timing was right for Thomas to launch his official solo career in the spring of 2005. It was time to give his music a new coat of paint, similar to how "Smooth" spun his career in a different direction, and that's exactly what his solo debut, Something to Be, is: a slick new variation on Thomas' signature sound. With its anthemic choruses and achingly sincere sentiments, Something to Be is clearly the work of the lead singer/songwriter of Matchbox Twenty, yet it lacks the lean rock-oriented sound of the group's albums, even if it is helmed by Matt Serletic, who has produced all three of the band's records. Serletic and Thomas have made a conscious attempt to have this solo album feel lighter, brighter, and a little hipper than Matchbox Twenty's music, adding slight drum loops and electronic elements to the rhythms while taking Thomas away from strictly guitar-based arrangements. Heavy on keyboards, elastic guitars, horns, insistent rhythms, and even the occasional gospel-inspired backing chorus or worldbeat inflection, this is a far splashier affair than the average Matchbox Twenty album, and that alone would make Something to Be a noteworthy solo record, since it is indeed a different beast than Thomas' regular gig, but the fresher sound is married to a strong set of songs that play to his strengths as a craftsman of big, anthemic post-alternative mainstream rock. This isn't edgy work by any means -- and for as hooky and chorus-driven as it is, it's music that becomes memorable through repeated plays, never quite catching hold upon the first listen -- but it's more colorful and well-constructed than a lot of contemporary mainstream rock in the mid-2000s, and it's arguably more appealing than Matchbox Twenty's earnest guitar rock, which can occasionally seem rathRolling Stone (p.72) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[T]he fare here is significantly spicier, with Latin and even funk undertones." Rob Thomas Something To Be Songs Something To Be Music Review Purchase Something To Be CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | T-Rock Defcon 1: Lyrical Warfare CD (2003)
Something To Be
$13.89
| | 3 Doors Down Seventeen Days CD (2005)
Something To Be
$12.55
| | Lifehouse CD (2005) Enhanced CD
Something To Be
$11.69
| | Garbage Bleed Like Me CD (2005) Enhanced CD
Something To Be
$12.59
| | Nickelback All The Right Reasons CD (2005)
Something To Be
$14.79 Nickelback: Ryan Peake, Chad Kroeger (vocals, guitar); Mike Kroeger ...
| | Best Of Rod Stewart CD (1976)
Something To Be
$12.59 2002 reissue of 1976 compilation (re-released in 1988 with additional tracks included here) released to commemorate Stewart's appearance at Glastonbury 2002. 18 tracks, 'Maggie May', 'Cut Across Shorty', 'An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down', '(I Know) I'm Losing You', 'Handbags & Gladrags', 'It's All Over Now', 'Street Fighting Man', 'Gasoline Alley', 'Every Picture Tells A Story', 'What's Made Milwaukee Famous' (Has Made A Loser Out Of Me), 'Oh No, Not My Baby', 'Jodie You Wear It Well', 'Let Me Be Your Car', 'Pinball Wizard', 'Sailor', 'Angel' & 'Mine For Me.' 20 bit digitally remastered from the original master tapes. Authentic packaging faithful to the original album release.
Producers: Lou Reizner, Rod Stewart. Personnel: Rod Stewart (vocals); Michael d'Abo (piano). Illustrator: John Youssi. Photographer: Aaron Sixx. Arrangers: Michael d'Abo; Rod Stewart. With his Sam Cooke phrasing and rough as sandpaper voice, Rod Stewart has been both brilliant ("Maggie May") and shameless ("Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?") during his four-decade career, and if he now seems well past his sell-by date, there's no denying that his distinctive voice is a pop culture wonder. This uneven best-of collection has both of the hits listed above as well as late-period gems like Stewart's version of Tom Waits' magnificent "Downtown Train" (Stewart's ...
| | Commander Cody Tour From Hell (1973) CD (1996) Import
Something To Be
$13.25
| | Red London Live In Leipzig (4.14.00) CD (2008) (Import) Import
Something To Be
$15.85
| | Flare Hung CD (2003)
Something To Be
$13.85 NYC Based chamberpop ensemble Flare, headed by songwriter/vocalist LD Beghtol (left)and multi-instrumentalist Charles Newman (right), blends classic pop with experimental, classical, country music and noise into a distinctive, contemporary sound. Rife with haunting vocals, lush keyboards, fragile ukuleles, delicate guitar and banjo textures and intense string arrangements, Flare is richly melodic and subtly unsettling. In a review of the album version of "Celebrate the misery," British baroque synthpop legend Momus said: "There's almost a machismo of melancholy [to the song]... to me that's very romantic." And CHICKFACTOR #12 called Flare's 1998 debut CD, BOTTOM (Tamper Evident), "the perfect music for lying on a chaise and wallowing in despair."Merritt became aware of Flare's music - which he waggishly dubbed "acoustic Goth" in a TIME OUT article about the band - through his manager, Claudia Gonson. Beghtol and Merritt's association began with a shared love of obscure experimental pop and a keen interest in arcane musical instruments. While recording the now-classic 69 LOVE SONGS, Merritt availed himself of Beghtol's cache of vintage Marxophones, Tremoloas, Violin-Ukes, ukuleles and other musical toys - and Beghtol made his recorded keyboard debut with the Fields on his 1893 harmonium on their duet, "Xylophone Track." Additionally, Beghtol and Merritt - along with another 69 LOVE SONGS guest vocalist, Dudley Klute - perform under the moniker The Three Terrors.Flare's dark sound has garnered favorable comparisons to Low, This Mortal Coil, Lisa Germano and Love among others. Recently Flare has performed ...
| | Scarlet Rivera Scarlet Fever CD (1978)
Something To Be
$12.05 This is the second solo effort from Scarlet Rivera (violin), who had gained ...
| | Carpenters Gold: 35th Anniversary Edition CDs (2000) With DVD; Digipak
Something To Be
$27.65 This 3-disc set (2-CD's, 1 DVD) assembles a total of 55 tracks of their greatest songs. The set includes track-by-track descriptions and an opening by Richard Carpenter, plus 3 tracks previously unreleased in the USA!
The Carpenters: Karen Carpenter (vocals); Richard Carpenter (keyboards, background vocals). Additional personnel includes: Ray Parker Jr. (guitar); Tom Scott (tenor saxophone); Hal Blaine (drums). Producers: Jack Daugherty, Richard Carpenter, Karen Carpenter. Compilation producer: Richard Carpenter. Recorded between 1970 & 1997. Includes liner notes by Richard Carpenter. This release includes a 15-track bonus DVD. The Carpenters: Karen Carpenter (vocals); Richard Carpenter (keyboards, background vocals). Additional personnel: Tim May, Tony Peluso (guitar); Buddy Emmons (pedal steel guitar); Sheridon Stokes (flute, recorder); Bob Messenger (flute, saxophone); Tommy Morgan (harmonica); Doug Strawn (clarinet); Earl Dumler (oboe); Jack Nimitz (baritone saxophone); Chuck Findley (trumpet); Tom Hensley (tack piano); Joe Osborn (bass instrument); Hal Blaine, Harvey Mason, Sr. , Ron Tutt (drums); Peter Limonick (percussion). Liner Note Author: Richard Carpenter . Usually ...
| | Inside Free 1968-1972: An Independent Critical Review CD (2005)
Something To Be
$12.35
| | Life Without Ryan Twenty Minutes Late CD (2006)
Something To Be
$10.09
| | Bronco Sin Fronteras...En Vivo CD (2007) With DVD
Something To Be
$10.55
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