| | Albert Collins Deep Freeze CD Albert Collins Discography of CDs
This double-disc set on the Total Recall label -- an imprint known for budget but quality reissues -- combines a pair of live Albert Collins shows previously issued alternately as Live at the Fillmore West (Catfish) and Thaw Out at the Fillmore (Snapper), and Iceman at Mount Fuji (Fuel 2000). Coupled here as Deep Freeze, they aren't defining statements by any means, but they certainly are enjoyable with decent sound and utterly stunning moments. ~ Thom Jurek
Two live shows from the 'Iceman'. This captures the legendary blues sound which made him so popular. CD1 was recorded at the Filmore West in 1969 and CD2 at the El Mocambo Club in 1973.
Recording information: Fillmore West; Mocambo Club. Albert Collins Deep Freeze Songs | | Deep Freeze CD DISC 1: |
| 1. | Introduction | |
| 2. | How Blue Can You Get? | |
| 3. | Thaw Out | $0.99 | |
| 4. | So Tired | |
| 5. | Funky | |
| 6. | Deep Freeze | |
| 7. | Baby What Do You Want Me to Do? | |
| 8. | Mustang Sally | |
| 9. | Backstroke | $0.99 | |
| | Deep Freeze Songs DISC 2: |
| 1. | Intro | |
| 2. | All About My Girl | |
| 3. | I've Got a Mind to Travel | $0.99 | |
| 4. | Things That I Used to Do | |
| 5. | Frosty | $0.99 | |
| 6. | Wah Heat | |
| 7. | Can't You See What You're Doing to Me | |
| 8. | Cold Tremor | |
| 9. | Johnny B. Cool | |
| Deep Freeze Review
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Purchase Deep Freeze CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Allman Brothers Band Dreams CDs (1989) Box Set
Deep Freeze album
$38.49 DREAMS is a 4-CD box set compiling in chronological order tracks by the Allman Brothers Band, as well as tracks by bands featuring one or more member of the Allman Brothers Band and solo performances by Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts.
Recorded between 1966 & 1988. Includes a 32-page illustrated booklet and liner notes by John Swenson.
Like nearly all box sets, DREAMS has plenty to recommend it-and a few nagging drawbacks. The set's chief shortcoming is its two conflicting goals: providing an overview of the Allmans' history, thus attracting buyers seeking the ultimate hits package, and including enough unreleased tracks and rarities to appeal to the band's most devoted fans. As a result, DREAMS is neither the definitive Allman Brothers collection nor the gift to hardcore fans that, say, THE BOOTLEG SERIES is to Dylan-philes.
DREAMS' strengths are considerable. First and foremost, the box contains nearly five wall-to-wall hours of great music. By including everything from early demos ...
| | Poco Forgotten Trail (1969-74) CDs (1990)
Deep Freeze CD music
$15.29 This compilation contains 38 songs, including many new remixes from original master tapes, 6 previously unreleased songs, alternate versions of 3 others, and a comprehensive 36 page booklet, with historic liner notes and photos.
This excellent two-disc collection captures Poco's finest moments from the days when they were laying down the template for all the country-rock music that was to follow. It's hard to remember, but when the Eagles first hit the scene, they were thought by many to be a Poco-wannabe band. Listen to this set and you'll hear why. The Forgotten Trail (1969-1974) culls tracks from Poco's first eight albums, as well as unreleased cuts and singles. From the classic anthem "Pickin' Up the Pieces," which kicks things off, through "You Better Think Twice," "C'mon," "Kind Woman," "From the Inside," "A Good Feelin' to Know," "Crazy Eyes," and on and on, this is wonderful music, ahead of its time in many ways. If Poco had arrived on the scene in the early '90s, they would have been kings of the country charts. Of course, without Poco, country music wouldn't have taken on the rock trappings that it did in the '80s and '90s. As it was, the band was considered too country for the Top 40 rock format of the time, and too rock & roll for country radio. ...
| | Allman Brothers Band Enlightened Rogues CD (1979) Remastered
Deep Freeze music CDs
$4.89 The Allman Brothers closed out the '70s with a solid if unspectacular set that's aged better than one might have expected. It may not be particularly innovative, but it lacks nothing in the grit and sass departments.
The album begins ("Crazy Love") the way it ends ("Sail Away"), which is to say with two dive-bomb blasts of Dickie Betts' slide ...
| | Riot Inishmore/Sons Of Society CD (2004)
Deep Freeze songs
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| | Doors Legacy: The Absolute Best CDs (1967)
Deep Freeze album
$19.79 Recorded between 1967 & 1983. Includes liner notes by Jim Ladd.
Released to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the release of the first Doors album, THE VERY BEST OF THE DOORS supercedes all former Doors compilations. At two discs and 34 tracks, this is quite comprehensive for a band whose key lineup released only half a dozen albums. In addition to all the expected hits like "Light My Fire," "Hello I Love You," and "Roadhouse Blues," this compilation delves much deeper into the catalogue with fan favorites such as "Not To Touch the Earth" and "Wishful Sinful," ...
| | Myron Floren 22 Of The Greatest Polkas CD (1987)
Deep Freeze CD music
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| | Carolina Blues & Gospel CD (1998) Import
Deep Freeze music CDs
$13.35 Here's a peculiar case where the producers at Document came up with a title for a collection of rare African-American music, then began the liner notes with backpedaling caveats as to why some or most of the artists and music within do not fit the stated theme. The first ten tracks were recorded in New York by a small pack of Midwesterners who drop references to Cleveland and appear to have had no discernible links with the Carolinas. That contradiction should not be allowed to distract anyone from the poignant blues and rowdy good humor of electrically amplified guitarists Teddy "Sonny Boy" Smith and Sam Bradley, or their pianist Lonnie Johnson, who should not be confused with the famous blues guitarist and violinist from New Orleans. Undoubtedly, if these recordings (issued under the names of Sonny Boy & Lonnie, Sonnie & Lonnie, Sonny Boy & Sam, Shorty Smith & His Rhythm, or Lightnin' Guitar's Band) were better known today, they would be hailed as "roots of rock & roll" alongside the landmark achievements of B.B. King, Big Joe Williams, and Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup. The upbeat numbers were obviously tapping into the embryonic undercurrents of rock & roll as they existed in 1945, and there is a rambunctious edge to some of the vocal delivery that brings to mind Doctor Clayton, Tampa Red, Sunnyland Slim, and even Fats Waller. "I Wonder Who's Holding You," on the other hand, closely resembles previously mentioned King recording star Lonnie Johnson's approach to the romantic sentimental lament. "Bigheaded Woman" contains some very funny lines about loving and fearing a woman who sleeps with her eyes wide open like a rattlesnake. In his "South West Pacific Blues," Sonny Boy anticipates J.B. Lenoir's Korean War-era blues by opening up and revisiting the ordeal of conscription and separation from loved ones during the Second World War, including an apparent reference to Finschhafen, a town in New Guinea which was liberated from Japanese occupation by Australian troops during the autumn of 1943. Mary DeLoatch, also known as Mary DeLoach, was a Norfolk, VA-based gospel singer who used the name Marylin Scott or Marylyn Scott the Carolina Blues Girl when performing rhythm & blues tunes like "I Got What My Daddy Likes" and the "Beer Bottle Boogie." When her devotional self took over, this guitar-strumming, pleasant voiced woman sounded more than a little like Sister Rosetta Tharpe. She switched to exclusively religious material after 1950 and her final recording appears to have been made in ...
| | James "Son" Thomas Beefsteak Blues CD (1998)
Deep Freeze songs
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| | John Brannen Good Thief CD (2004)
Deep Freeze CD music
$10.85 On singer/songwriter John Brannen's fourth album, he combines rootsy arrangements with a handful of solid songs to create a wise record that doesn't forget to rock. His sound and approach, as some critics have noted, shows the influence of Bruce Springsteen and John Cougar Mellencamp without being derivative. Call it rock from America's heartland. "A Pair of Dice" tells the tale of a lucky gambler whose luck runs out when the devil comes to him "disguised, painted lips and pleading eyes." While this might look like another song about another woman doing a man wrong, the lyric never spells everything out ...
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| | Rocket Scientists Revolution Road CD (2006) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan
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