| | Arthur Brown Dance CD Arthur Brown Discography of CDs
 |
|
Our Price: $37.25 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
|  |
Japanese pressing 24-bit remastered reissue packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. Air Mail Archive. 2006.
By the mid-1970s, Arthur Brown had spent some six years operating so far below the radar that many people who remembered his "Fire" chart-topper could easily be excused for thinking he'd vanished altogether. Of course, aficionados knew he'd been busy elsewhere, scouring the progressive underground with Journey and Kingdom Come, and fans of those projects were non-plussed indeed when Brown suddenly reappeared in the mainstream, turning up on the Saturday morning British TV pop program, Supersonic, to plug his latest single. Resplendent in gold wellies, Brown drew the Animals' "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" to new heights of dementia -- the single itself was ultimately a flop, but the performance was killer, and all ears were open for the album that followed, Dance. Unfortunately, they quickly closed back up again, as the LP was revealed not as the long-awaited second coming of the "God of Hell Fire", but as a lackluster mingling of, indeed, dancey rhythms and dirgey ditties, a dry, dull collection that swept every last iota of Brown's past reputation aside, in search of an elusive commercialism. Brown himself had promised beforehand that he intended what would today be considered a "World Music" album, absorbing dance rhythms from around the world, but that plan appears to have dissipated once he got into the studio, and only one further track demanded the listener's attention, as Brown linked with Toots and the Maytals for the tumultuous "Soul Garden." Elsewhere, however, there are few highlights and even fewer tracks you might return to later. Quite simply, alongside its equally ill-conceived follow-up, Chisholm in My Bosom, it is the sound of desperation grinding against redundancy. ~ Dave Thompson
Personnel: Arthur Brown (vocals); Errol "Ranchie" McLean, Andy Dalby (guitar); George Khan (saxophone); Keith Tippett, Peter Solley, Errol "Tarzan" Nelson (keyboards); Drachen Theaker, Charlie Dunbar, Charlie Charles (drums); Malcolm Flynn, Pat Lewis (percussion).
Arthur Brown Dance Songs | 1. | We've Got to Get out of This Place |
| 2. | Helen with the Sun |
| 3. | Take a Chance |
| 4. | Crazy |
| 5. | Hearts and Winds |
| 6. | Dance |
| 7. | Out of Time |
| 8. | Quietly with Tact |
| 9. | Soul Garden |
| 10. | Lord Will Find a Way |
| 11. | Is There Nothing Beyond God |
| Dance Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Arthur Brown Dance CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Dance CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Return To Forever Returns - Live At Montreux 2008 DVD (2008) DTS Sound
Dance album
$12.39
| | Frank Sinatra Nothing But The Best CD (2008) Remastered
Dance CD music
$15.39 "The Chairman of the Board" died in May of 1998, yet his music sounds as vital and relevant today as ever. Released on the 10th anniversary of his death--in coordination with a slew of DVD releases commemorating the singer's acting career as well as an official U.S. Postal Service stamp--NOTHING BUT THE BEST provides an excellent look at Sinatra's tenure at the Reprise label. Among the album's 22 vintage cuts are classics ...
| | Thelonious Monk At Carnegie Hall CD (2005)
Dance music CDs
$13.75 On paper it seems as if such titanic and distinctive musical personalities as Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane might not mix very well, but this stellar set, recorded live at Carnegie Hall in 1957, plays almost like a blissful extended duet between the two (with support from a sensitive yet hard-swinging bassist and drummer). The opener, "Monk's Mood," for example, features the composer/pianist's typically brilliant, idiosyncratic ...
| | Tony Bennett Swingin' Christmas CDs (2008) Bonus DVD; Deluxe Edition; Digipak
Dance songs
$12.99
| | Gregg Karukas GK CD (2009) Digipak
Dance album
$12.59
| | Jazz Icons Series 4 Box Set DVDs (2009)
Dance CD music
$101.39 Standard Screen
| | Dawn Of The Century Ragtime Orchestra CD (1995)
Dance music CDs
$14.29
| | Greatest Folksingers Of The 60'S CD (1972)
Dance songs
$15.05
| | Original Five Blind Boys Of Alabama Oh Lord--Stand By Me/Marching Up To Zion CD (1970)
Dance album
$9.75 The Original Five Blind Boys Of Alabama: ...
| | Coleman Hawkins Sirius CD (1966)
Dance CD music
$13.95
| | Stephane Grappelli Celebrating Grappelli CD (1997) (Import) United Kingdom
Dance music CDs
$7.85 Celebrating Grappelli was issued shortly after the legendary jazz violinist's death on December 1, 1997; it is actually under guitarist Martin Taylor's leadership, with Grappelli as an overdubbed guest on three tracks plus three duets repeated from their Reunion CD recorded in 1993. This tribute was conceived by Taylor for his Spirit of Django Band as a way of honoring the violinist. A number of standards long associated with Grappelli's repertoire are included: a re-creation of the 1934 arrangement of "Undecided," with Grappelli and Taylor joined by singer Claire Martin and the band. The violinist still swings effortlessly on "Chicago" and "Dinah." The remainder of the release features Taylor with his band; the best tracks include the samba-flavored "Years Apart," written by Taylor and Martin, and Taylor's duet with Jack Emblow on accordion ...
| | Shaggs Philosophy Of The World CD (1969)
Dance songs
$7.59 PHILOSOPHY OF THE WORLD is reissued here for the first time in ...
| | Avantis Vol. 2-Voices Of The World CD (2005) (Import)
Dance album
$10.49
| | Bad Plus These Are The Vistas CD (2003)
Dance CD music
$7.59 The Bad Plus threw a lightning bolt at the music scene in 2003 with its major-label debut THESE ARE THE VISTAS, a "jazz" record that rocked hard. GIVE offers more of the same, a potent combination of technical virtuosity and free-jazz adventurousness filtered through a rock sensibility. The group wastes little time in dispelling the notion that it's your run-of-the-mill piano trio, laying out its modus operandi in opening track "1979 Semi-Finalist." Drummer David King pounds a driving backbeat behind Reid Anderson's powerhouse bass while Ethan Iverson coolly rides the waves with graceful pianism.
Iverson moves easily from elegant lyricism ("Frog and Toad") to two-fisted sonic assaults ("Dirty Blonde"). ...
| | Hidden Beach Recordings Presents: Unwrapped Vol. 2 CD (2004)
Dance music CDs
$7.75 The idea of performing smooth-jazz versions of gangsta rap hits is one of those crazy strokes of genius so stunning in its simplicity that it's amazing nobody thought of it before. And, in fact, the PICKIN' ON? series has been doing this kind of thing in a country vein for over a decade, although so far rap music appears safe from being transmogrified into bluegrass. And so we have the startling spectacle of Eminem's "Lose Yourself" getting a moody reworking by violinist Karen Briggs, while, in another unlikely pairing, smooth-jazz keyboardist Jeff Lorber transforms 50 Cent's "P.I.M.P." into a Latin-tinged, downtempo after-hours fantasy. There are sinuous tribute medleys to both Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls, while the Outkast hit 'The Way You Move" receives a glossy makeover courtesy of Dennis Nelson's acoustic guitar stylings. If you're a smooth jazz fan who likes a little frisson with your funk, UNWRAPPED ...
|
|
|