| | Nat "King" Cole Rockin Boppin & Blues CD - Import Nat "King" Cole Discography of CDs
Rockin Boppin & Blues Music Nat "King" Cole Rockin Boppin & Blues Songs Rockin Boppin & Blues Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Nat "King" Cole Rockin Boppin & Blues CD - Import. 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 Rockin Boppin & Blues CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ella Fitzgerald Twelve Nights In Hollywood CDs (1961) Remastered; Box Set
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$55.98
| | Jazz Icons: Woody Herman - Live In '64 DVD (2009) Black & White
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$13.24
| | Bob Brookmeyer Blues Hot & Cold / 7 X Wilder CD (2009) (Import)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$13.59
| | Dino: The Essential Dean Martin CD (2004)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$11.55
| | Dianne Reeves Good Night, & Good Luck CD (2005)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$12.55
| | Spyro Gyra Night Before Christmas CD (2008)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$10.49
| | Norman Blake Morning Glory Ramblers CD (2004)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$12.79 Features songs popularized by the Carter Family. It's hard to believe that Morning Glory Ramblers is the first full-length recording by Norman and Nancy Blake in eight years. Certainly they've been active, from playing on all 47 Down From the Mountain dates, performing on the O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Cold Mountain soundtracks, June Carter Cash's final album, Wildwood Flower, and various other projects. This album, recorded on the soundstage of the Western Jubilee Warehouse in Colorado Springs, is a dynamite setting for the material found here. There are 17 songs in this collection, seven of them traditional melodies, still others so old they've seldom been heard over the last century, a Hank Williams' tune, and a couple by friends of Norman and Nancy's that are so saturated in the deep country, they could have been written decades before. The set opens with "Sunny Side of Life," one of two songs closely associated with the Carter Family. The strident, two-part harmony and dual guitars are the perfect opener for an album that is arresting for its immediacy and its strident honoring of tradition. That said, these songs aren't nostalgic; they are part of a living, breathing tradition that informs as it delights. The other Carter-linked number, "When the Roses Bloom in Dixieland," written by George Evans in 1913, is the strongest thing here; its lyric rambles and shimmers, floating through the woven guitars. Norman and Nancy's voices are so closely aligned, without artifice or affect, that emotion just drips form the verses. One of the album's centerpieces is "I Loved You Better Than You Knew," by Johnny Carroll (not the rockabilly legend; this was written in 1918). Its melodic architecture evokes both Celtic balladry and the mountain music of Southern Appalachia. Also in the middle of the record is "The Wayworn Traveler," by John Matthias from 1836, an American gospel tune that is well-known as "Palms of Victory." Of the modern songs, Laurie Lewis' bluegrass ...
| | R Kelly Happy People/U Saved Me CDs (2004)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$15.25 2cds-Feat:Kelly Price,Syleena Johnson,Michelle Williams
Personnel: R. Kelly (vocals); Kelly Price (vocals); Donnie Lyle (guitar, bass instrument, background vocals); Rodney East, Kendall D. Nesbitt (keyboards); Abel Garibaldi, Nathan Wheeler (programming, background vocals); Steve Bearsley, Andy Gallas, Ian Mereness, Jason Mlodzinski (programming); Uncle Life (background vocals). On his follow-up to 2003's successful Chocolate Factory, scandal-plagued R. Kelly spins his notoriety for sympathy, acknowledging that he's a flawed man and a sinner, but he believes in God and is just looking for love and peace. That, in a nutshell, is the theme of Happy People/U Saved Me, a double disc containing two distinct albums (just like OutKast's Speakerboxx/The Love Below). The first, Happy People, is a seductive, late-night album about positivity and love, the second all about salvation and God. Taken as a whole, the album presents Kelly as a saved sinner who still struggles with temptation -- struggles that are chronicled joyfully on Happy People and remorsefully ...
| | Doris Day April In Paris/Young At Heart CD (2004)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$12.95
| | Players Como Una Estrella CD (2004)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$6.15
| | Deacon Jones Makin Blues History CD (2002)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$13.69
| | Brainard and Russell Life In Java CD (2005)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$12.69
| | Walls Of Jericho With Devils Amongst Us CD (2006)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$9.55
| | Cutie Honey The Live Vocal CD (2008) (Import)
$44.69 | | Darin Warner Still Pictures CD (2008) (Import)
Rockin Boppin & Blues
$7.49  Darin WarnerDarin Warner has lived a life that reads like one of the many country songs he writes and performs. He began life in Box Hill, Victoria, but moved to the gold fields of Western Australia soon after. His father, Peter, a musician, was continually looking for greater opportunities to develop his talents and found them there. From the age of four Darin can remember sitting in front of the stage and watching his father perform, soaking up everything that came his way. His early years were spent with his ear to the record player mimicking singers to the likes of Merle Haggard and George Jones and other greats. Life changed soon after for young Darin. His parents separated and his Mum, Robyn, moved him and his younger brother and sister to Loxton, South Australia. It was here that Darin grew up and continued to develop a deep love of music, especially country music. Darin left school early and took whatever work came his way; shovelling manure, painting houses, cooking in a restaurant, working in a service station and being a builder’s labourer. But he never gave up on his first love and at every opportunity he sang and wrote songs. When he was eighteen he joined the army. This ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|