| | Josh Turner Your Man CD Josh Turner Discography of CDs
(16 Customer Reviews)
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Personnel: Josh Turner (vocals); Ralph Stanley (vocals); Bryan Sutton (guitar, banjo); Aubrey Haynie (mandolin, fiddle); Shannon Forrest (drums); Eric Darken (percussion); Dana Williams, Gene Johnson , Marty Roe (background vocals). Josh Turner made a splash on the country music scene in 2003 with his hardline traditionalist debut LONG BLACK TRAIN, and reappeared in 2006 with YOUR MAN. Turner's sophomore release is as decidedly old-school as his first, reaching back to the mournful ballads and honky tonk leanings of Hank Williams Sr. and overtly referencing the likes of Loretta Lynn and Johnny Cash. Genre legends Ralph Stanley and John Anderson are on board to lend the young Turner some historical credibility. The real draw of the album, however, is Turner's beautifully rich baritone voice, which is represented to fine effect on these 11 tracks. While not exactly a neo-traditionalist masterpiece, YOUR MAN offers a refreshing antidote to the country-pop glutting the market in the 2000s. Josh Turner's second album is deliberately steeped in country music tradition; at one point or another, he name-checks Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton, Charley Pride, and Red Sovine; sings with John Anderson and Ralph Stanley; and borrows songs from Anderson and Don Williams. At a time when country music, as so often, was flirting with pop, Turner took a leaf from his main immediate influence, Randy Travis, and established a sort of neo-neo-traditionalist approach with his first significant hit, "Long Black Train," in 2003-2004. Although it topped out at only number 13 in Billboard's country chart, the song established Turner, whose debut album, named after the single, went platinum. There isn't anything as arresting on this collection (the title song, an ordinary love ballad, inched into the country Top 20 prior to the album's release), but it is more consistent overall. Producer Frank Rogers constructs conventional country arrangements that do not draw any special attention to themselves, which is appropriate since all they need to do is serve as background to the real attraction, Turner's resonant bass baritone. It's that voice that matters, more than the music and more than the songs, although Turner and Rogers have put together a nicely balanced selection that includes a heartfelt ballad in "Angels Fall Sometimes" (one of five songs out of 11 that Turner wrote or co-wrote); the honky tonk duet "White Noise," a surprisingly successful pairing with Anderson; the dumb-but-no-doubt-sincere "Me and God," sung with Stanley; the rollicking novelty "Loretta Lynn's Lincoln" (a video waiting to happen); and the winning revival of Williams' 1977 hit "Lord Have Mercy on a Country Boy." Turner doesn't quite have the sense of wry humor necessary to make Anderson's (or songwriter Shawn Camp's) "Baby's Gone Home to Mama" his own -- he's still a better technical singer than he is an interpreter -- but he's still young, and improving. ~ William RuhlmannEntertainment Weekly (p.71) - "Country's smooth new baritone has fun with just how low he can go on his second CD." Josh Turner Your Man Songs Purchase Your Man CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Josh Turner Long Black Train CD (2003)
Your Man
$10.25
| | Brad Paisley Time Well Wasted CD (2005)
Your Man
$9.85
| | Brooks & Dunn Hillbilly Deluxe CD (2005)
Your Man
$9.99
| | Joe Nichols III CD (2005)
Your Man
$6.59
| | Carrie Underwood Some Hearts CD (2005)
Your Man
$9.69
| | Josh Turner Everything Is Fine CD (2007)
Your Man
$10.45
| | Hits Of Western Swing CD (1999)
Your Man
$13.15
| | Fall Wonderful & Frightening World CD (1984) Bonus Tracks
Your Man
$10.15 The Fall: Mark E. Smith (vocals); Brix Smith (guitar, vocals); Craig Scanlon (guitar); Stephen Hanley (bass, acoustic guitar); Karl Burns (drums, percussion, bass); Paul Hanley (drums, keyboards). Additional personnel: Gavin Friday (vocals). Personnel: Brix Smith (vocals, guitar); Mark E. Smith (vocals, tapes); Gavin Friday (vocals); Craig Scanlon (guitar); Steve Hanley (acoustic guitar); Paul Hanley (keyboards, drums); Karl Burns (drums, percussion). Photographer: Michael Pollard . The Fall made the leap to a semi-major label -- Beggars Banquet -- with The Wonderful and Frightening World of the Fall, hooking up with noted producer John Leckie to create another smart, varied album. Contemporaneous with the slightly friendlier "Oh! Brother" and "C.R.E.E.P." singles without actually including them, Wonderful and Frightening World makes few concessions to the larger market -- every potential hook seemed spiked with the band's usual rough take-it-or-leave-it stance. Mark E. Smith's audible, tape-distorting spit on the descending chord blast of "Elves" -- already spiked with enough vocal craziness as it is -- gives a sense of where the album ...
| | Patsy Cline Greatest Hits CD (1988) Remastered
Your Man
$8.49 This is the longest selling album in the history of country music. Released in 1967, this collection of a dozen gems from country music's greatest female voice raced to #5 on the country charts upon release and has spent over 630 weeks on the country catalog charts since reissue on CD in 1988. Digitally remastered/HDCD. MCA. 2003.
Personnel: Patsy Cline (vocals); Randy Hughes, Ray Edenton, Grady Martin, Hank Garland (guitar); Walter Haynes, Ben Keith (steel guitar); Rita Faye Wilson (autoharp); Floyd Cramer (piano, organ); Hargus "Pig" Robbins (piano); Bill Pursell (organ); Bob Moore, Joe Jenkins (acoustic bass); Harold Bradley (bass); Buddy Harman, Doug Kirkham (drums); Millie Kirkham (background vocals). The Jordanaires: Gordon Stoker, Hoyt Hawkins, Ray Walker, Neal Matthews, Jr. (background vocals). Recorded between 1961 & 1963. Includes liner notes by Jay Orr and Don Roy. All tracks have been digitally remastered. Personnel: Patsy Cline (vocals); Randy Hughes (acoustic guitar); Grady Martin, Hank Garland (electric guitar); Ben Keith, Walter Haynes (steel guitar); Floyd Cramer (piano, organ); Hargus "Pig" Robbins (piano); Bill Pursell (organ, vibraphone); Bob Moore (acoustic bass); Harold Bradley (electric bass); Murrey "Buddy" Harman, Doug Kirkham (drums); The Jordanaires (background vocals). Recorded between 1960 & 1963. Originally released on Decca (DL7-4854). Includes liner notes by Jay Orr and Don Roy. Digitally remastered using HDCD technology. It's not especially difficult to compile a satisfying and listenable album from Patsy Cline's chart hits, and this solid and serviceable set offers a dozen simply brilliant songs from Cline's catalog. The biggest and best-known hits are here -- "Walkin' After Midnight," "Crazy," "Sweet Dreams," "He's Got You" -- as well as a few equally beautiful lesser-knowns, such as "You're Stronger Than Me" and "Why Can't He Be You," all of which capture her superb voice and the gloriously lush "countrypolitan" production from Owen Bradley at its best. In short, if you're ...
| | Martina Mcbride Wild Angels CD (1995)
Your Man
$12.79 Personnel: Martina McBride (vocals, tambourine); Paul Worley (high-string acoustic, acoustic & electric guitars, 6-string ...
| | Albion Band Road Movies CD (2001) (Import) United Kingdom
Your Man
$16.69
| | Harry James Juke Box Jamboree/Jazz Session CD (2001)
Your Man
$10.59
| | Pimpinela 20 Originales CD (2007) Remastered
Your Man
$9.05
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