| | West Valley Highway Marysville CD West Valley Highway Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Inspired by many of the genres most timeless artists, West Valley Highway are reminiscent of an era long gone, yet focused on their own unique interpretation of country music’s future.From stripped down Bakersfield shuffles, to lush jazz tinged bar room ballads, their combination of crystal clear voices, poignant lyrics, beautiful guitar work, rock solid rhythm and well crafted songs are what “honky tonk” music is all about.Their song “I’m that Man” was one of KEXP’s most requested singles of 2004. Featuring bluegrass instrumentation and stunning precision harmony vocals, “I’m that Man” earned the band new fans, as well as opening slots for country heavy weights, Dale Watson and Junior Brown.Don Slack, of KEXP's Swingin' Doors, says:"This Seattle band featuring former members of the Souvenirs debuts with an excellent set of Bakersfield honky tonk. The band's lean country-rock sound is highlighted by rock-solid musicianship, confident lead vocals and stellar harmonizing. Beautifully produced by the band themselves, Marysville is stuffed with memorable songs from beginning to end."
Personnel: Terry Bratsch (vocals, acoustic guitar); Boots Kutz (vocals, drums, percussion); Orville Johnson (lap steel guitar, dobro); Juan Barco (bajo sexto); Brian Eichelberger (fiddle); Micah Hulscher (piano); Scott Meder (percussion).
Recording information: Fastback Studio, Seattle, WA.
West Valley Highway Marysville Songs | 1. | One of These Days |
| 2. | I'm That Man |
| 3. | Lifetime Ago, A |
| 4. | Marysville |
| 5. | She's the Kind |
| 6. | Back to Bakersfield |
| 7. | Fire on My Heels |
| 8. | Emmett Redeen |
| 9. | Being Me |
| 10. | Closing Time |
| Purchase Marysville CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ella Mae Morse Dynamite Texas Diva Live CD (2003)
Marysville album
$13.89
| | Brad Paisley Time Well Wasted CD (2005)
Marysville CD music
$9.59 Brad Paisley's music is an interesting amalgam of country sub-genres, a paradigm all its own. He melds straightforward, pop-friendly New Country with clever, somewhat Lyle Lovett-like songwriting and the occasional flutter of Joe ...
| | Dale Watson Whiskey Or God CD (2006) Digipak
Marysville music CDs
$11.49 With his beetle brows, his occasional penchant for lyrics dealing with damnation and salvation, and his startlingly deep and resonant voice, you might be forgiven for mistaking Dale Watson for a honky tonk version of Nick Cave. Then again, the whole idea of a honky tonk version of Nick Cave is weird enough that maybe you wouldn't be forgiven after all. And besides, ...
| | Texas Sapphires Valley So Steep CD (2006)
Marysville songs
$12.95 Pearl-snap buttons and skull-and-crossbones ...
| | Dale Watson From The Cradle To The Grave CD (2007)
Marysville album
$13.89
| | Elizabeth Cook Balls CD (2007)
Marysville CD music
$12.89
| | Fred Koller No Song Left To Sell CD (2001)
Marysville music CDs
$13.85 Fred Koller began writing songs with Shel Silverstein in 1974. The latter was already well known for his cartoons, children's books, and a number of novelty hits that he wrote for other artists. Writing together whenever they were both in the same city, the two eventually amassed quite a number of tunes, some of which were recorded by other artists (Bobby Bare did a version of "This Guitar Is for Sale").
Finally, in the year 2000, shortly after Silverstein died, Koller and a couple of accompanists went into a small Nashville studio to celebrate the fruits of the collaboration. The songs are peopled with colorful characters, ranging from tattooed women to Frank Sinatra. The narrative details are concise yet exquisite, creating odd, evocative, and often-humorous circumstances out of carefully wrought language. Recorded with a warm, intimate sound, this album pays tribute to an enduring and fruitful friendship.
Gadfly Records is proud to announce the release of No Song Left To Sell, a new album (the first in a decade!) from FRED KOLLER -- one that features all songs he wrote with songwriting icon SHEL SILVERSTEIN."Deep in the pocket of an old sport coat jacketI chanced to discover an old memory,Three for a quarter a black and white portrait,taken of Jennifer Johnson and Me"In 1974 Shel Silverstein and Fred Koller began writing their first song together. Shel was already famous for his Playboy cartoons, children's books and a string of hits for artists like Doctor Hook and Johnny Cash. Fred had hitchhiked to Nashville a year earlier with a handful of homemade songs and a Dobro guitar. They soon discovered a mutual love for old bookstores, out of the way cafes, and Ernest Tubb. They began writing songs that didn't sound like they could have been created by two guys from Chicago, but even "Jennifer Johnson and Me" has a hidden reference to Fred's hometown of Homewood in the last verse. Their collaboration grew into a friendship that would last for the next 25 years. Whenever Shel's travels brought him to Nashville, or when Fred found himself at Shel's hideaways in Sausilito, Greenwich Village, or Martha's Vineyard, they would always find the time to write together. On one two-week trip together to Santa Cruz, California they wrote a dozen songs like "Don't Knock The Music (You Were Made To)" and "Lovely Margarita," which features a transvestite strip tease artist unveiling the "secrets of an ancient world's delight." Other encounters produced "Little Green Buttons," which introduces listeners to a woman ...
| | Roger Creager Having Fun All Wrong CD (1998)
Marysville songs
$14.25 Roger Creager released his debut in 1998 with all the fanfare one might expect from a little-known performer without a label to promote his career. The quality of the music, however, guaranteed that someone would pick it up sooner or later and spread the good news. In 2002 Dualtone reissued Having Fun All Wrong along with Creager's 2000 release, I Got the Guns. Both albums find ...
| | Martha Reeves Motown Legends: Jimmy Mack CD (1993)
Marysville album
$7.89
| | We Are All Connected: Berklee College Of Music Rea CD (2006)
Marysville CD music
$11.49 We Are All Connected is the culmination of a collaborative effort engaging many members of the Berklee community. Early in 2005, a delegation of Boston women, including Bright Horizons Chair Linda Mason, wife of Berklee president Roger Brown; award-winning TV journalist Liz Walker; and the Rev. Dr. Gloria E. White-Hammond, traveled to the Sudan with Mercy Corps to learn about the impact of the civil conflict on women and children of Darfur. They took with them two songs: "We Are All Connected" and "To The Sudanese Women" written and performed by Berklee students Andrea Whaley and Farah Siraj. The songs, the result of a songwriting competition proposed by president Brown and initiated by Jack Perricone, chair of the songwriting department, were produced specifically for the trip and presented to the Darfurian women as a musical gift from their sisters a world away. The music was played for women in the refugee camps on a laptop – a device that many of them were seeing for the first time. Upon hearing the two songs, the Darfurian women leapt to their feet and began trilling and singing in jubilant musical response. That outpouring of emotion was recorded in the field and brought back to Berklee. During the trip, the Boston delegation heard firsthand accounts of the violence that has killed hundreds of thousands and displaced millions to refugee camps, ripping families apart and leaving women and children homeless, hungry, cold, and in personal danger. Mason shared these stories with the Berklee Women’s Network, inspiring the ...
| | Keith Varick Keep Breathing CD (2007)
Marysville music CDs
$6.69
| | Azafata Sexy CD (2008) (Import)
Marysville songs
$14.45
| | Hot Shots Teen Street CD (2009)
Marysville album
$13.19
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