| | Clay Walker Few Questions CD Clay Walker Discography of CDs
Clay Walker emerged in the post-Garth era of country music, and while he's not unmarked by that sensibility, he's also got a little of the Randy Travis-style balladeer in him. In fact, instead of opening with an up-tempo, hook-heavy song, A FEW QUESTIONS starts with its soul-searching title track, which finds Walker inquiring of God for the reasons why people suffer--not the sort of thing you'd expect from a guy whose sole writing credit on the album is "Jesus Was a Country Boy." Walker rocks out a bit on the roadhouse chugger "I'm in the Mood for You" and with the blues-rock swagger of "Coming Back Again," showing that he's just as adept at moving and shaking as he is at broken-hearted crooning. At the time of this album's release, Walker had already been a consistent hit-maker for 10 years, with little to prove, but that didn't slow the Clay Walker success train down a single bit.
Recorded at Ocean Way Nashville, The Money Pit, Black Bird Studio, and Loud Studios, Nashville, Tennessee.
Personnel: Clay Walker (vocals, guitar); Jimmy Ritchey (acoustic & electric guitars, nylon & gut string acoustic guitars, banjo); B. James Lowry, Biff Watson (acoustic guitar); David Grisson, Brent Mason (electric guitar); Paul Franklin (steel guitar); Jonathan Yudkin (banjo, violin, fiddle, viola, cello, harp); Aubrey Haynie (mandolin, fiddle); Kirl "Jelly Roll" Johnson (chromatic harp); Tim Akers (keyboards); Samuel B. Levine (tenor saxophone); Jim Horn (baritone saxophone); Steve Patrick (trumpet); Chris Dunn (trombone); Leland Sklar (bass); Shannon Forrest (drums); Eric Darken (percussion); Lisa Cochran, Melodie Crittenden, Wes Hightower (background vocals).
Few Questions Review
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Purchase Few Questions CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Clay Walker Live, Laugh, Love CD (1999)
Few Questions album
$5.95 The ladies sure love Clay Walker, and LIVE, LAUGH, LOVE, his fifth album, shows why. In songs like "She's Always Right" and "Woman Thing," Walker portrays himself as a sensitive guy who's alternately baffled and amused by his girlfriend's "womanly" qualities (liking chocolate, crying at movies, shopping, talking on the phone), but who's utterly powerless ...
| | Mark Wills Greatest Hits CD (2002)
Few Questions CD music
$12.59 Like his contemporaries Clay Walker and Kenny Chesney, Mark Wills has always been at his best on the weepers. GREATEST HITS wisely sticks to ballads and thus makes for a cohesive, consistent and enjoyable listen. The tunes are arranged chronologically, so it's easy to hear how Wills's sound has become increasingly pop-oriented. Though the production eventually becomes so slick there's little to remind one that this is a country album, Wills's extraordinarily sensitive vocals more than make up for the rather bland backing tracks. In addition to the chart toppers, GREATEST HITS includes two new tracks. "19 Something" is a laundry list of gen-x nostalgia items (Stretch Armstrong, parachute pants) and is seemingly designed for fans of That '70s Show, but Wills's sincere delivery renders it strangely affecting. "When You Think Of Me" is similar thematically to Glen Campbell's classic "Witchita Lineman," and nearly as heart wrenching. GREATEST HITS is an excellent collection in that it showcases Mark Wills's wonderful voice on uniformly excellent material that, while often sentimental, is never drippy.
Born in 1973, ...
| | Hulk DVDs (2003) Full Frame; Dubbed; Special Edition; Subtitled
Few Questions music CDs
$9.69 THE HULK, adapted by Ang Lee (CROUCHING TIGER/HIDDEN DRAGON, THE ICE STORM) from the Marvel comic book series, stars Eric Bana as Bruce Banner, the tormented scientist whose temper periodically transforms him into a raging green monster. Fellow scientist and Hulk-love-interest Betty Ross (Jennifer Connelly), shares a strange connection with Banner--both have abstract childhood nightmares that hint at a shared dark past. The missing pieces of the puzzle are revealed when Banner's unstable, mad-scientist father David (Nick Nolte) appears out of the blue, followed by Betty's father Ross (Sam Elliot), a military cowboy. Banner is ultimately trying to understand what it is that makes his strange and unpredictable metamorphosis occur, while his outbursts distract him, leading him out into the streets of San Francisco, to the Golden Gate Bridge, ...
| | Billy Currington CD (2002)
Few Questions songs
$11.69
| | 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection: The Best Of Mark Wills CD (2004) Remastered
Few Questions album
$6.79
| | Chris Cagle Anywhere But Here CD (2005)
Few Questions CD music
$8.85
| | Best Of Southern Rock CD (1994)
Few Questions music CDs
$5.95
| | Joan Baez Noel CD (1966) Remastered
Few Questions songs
$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 BAPTISM, NOEL sounds more like a Peter Schickele album than a Joan Baez album. Nearly a third of the 17 tracks are instrumentals on which Baez doesn't even appear, and although her voice is front and center throughout, Schickele's arrangements largely use it as merely another instrument in his ornate arrangements. A German-sung version of "Ave Maria" and a delicate rendering of "Coventry Carol" are particularly beautiful.
When Joan Baez began recording and performing during the late '50s and early '60s, she carved out a niche for herself as a remarkable singer of traditional music. In 1966 she released Noel, an album of seasonal songs notable for its variety and the fact that she sung two selections in German. One would expect to see "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" and "Deck the Halls," but Baez adds lesser-known gems like "Ave Maria" and "Coventry Carol," along with instrumental versions of "Bring a Torch, Jeannette, Isabella" and "Adeste Fideles." The arrangements, while not unusual for a holiday album, were something new for a Baez album. Lutes, ...
| | Lambchop Is A Woman CD (2002)
Few Questions album
$12.25
| | Brother, I'm Gettin Ready To Go CD (2004)
Few Questions CD music
$9.55
| | Overkill Unholy CDs (2004)
Few Questions music CDs
$10.65
| | Joy Black Notebook CD (2006)
Few Questions songs
$12.69
| | Nu Cafe: Mexico-Ambient Music With Native Sounds CD (2007)
Few Questions album
$7.85
| | Hair Of The Dog Rise CD (2007) (Import)
Few Questions CD music
$13.15 Their second album.
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