| | Dueling Banjos CD
Dueling Banjos Songs | 1. | Dueling Banjos - Various Artists |
| 2. | Earl's Breakdown - Various Artists |
| 3. | Eighth of January - Various Artists |
| 4. | Farewell Blues - Various Artists |
| 5. | Reuben's Train - Various Artists |
| 6. | Pony Express - Various Artists |
| 7. | Fire on the Mountain - Various Artists |
| 8. | Hard Ain't It Hard - Various Artists |
| 9. | Mountain Dew - Various Artists |
| 10. | Old Joe Clark - Various Artists |
| 11. | Little Maggie - Various Artists |
| 12. | Buffalo Gals - Various Artists |
| 13. | Riding the Waves - Various Artists |
| 14. | End of a Dream - Various Artists |
| 15. | Eight More Miles to Louisville - Various Artists |
| 16. | Rawhide - Various Artists |
| 17. | Shuckin' the Corn - Various Artists |
| Dueling Banjos Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Dueling Banjos 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 Dueling Banjos CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | George Thorogood The Dirty Dozen CD (2009)
Dueling Banjos album
$11.65 After more than a decade of recording for other labels, George Thorogood & the Destroyers moved back to EMI/Capitol for the release of 2009's THE DIRTY DOZEN. Split into two sides and consisting of covers of classic blues songs, some bar band favorites, and a couple of lesser-known tracks, the album digs back into the archives to uncover some buried tracks from the '80s and '90s. What's uncanny is that apart from the tinny sound of the recordings from the late '80s/early '90s, the band and Thorogood sound exactly the same almost two decades ...
| | Koko Taylor What It Takes: The Chess Years (Expanded Edition) CD (1977) Bonus Tracks
Dueling Banjos CD music
$15.18
| | Joe Bonamassa New Day Yesterday: Live CD (2002)
Dueling Banjos music CDs
$11.89
| | Fleetwood Mac Then Play On CD (1969)
Dueling Banjos songs
$9.65 There were 2 different versions of this LP, each with slightly different tracks. The CD contains all tracks from both versions.
Led by singer-guitarist ...
| | Gary Moore Bad For You Baby CD (2008)
Dueling Banjos album
$10.49 Another year, another Gary Moore blues-rock album nearly interchangeable with the last. That's no problem for fans or even newcomers, because despite the surface similarities between releases, Moore never seems to be going through the motions for the sake of further bulking up his already substantial catalog. His tough guitar lines remain biting yet classy, and his underappreciated voice is strong and convincing on originals and covers that nail all of the blues-rock bases without sounding rote. While there are no surprises here, Bad for You Baby is far from a disappointment. Moore continues a string of rugged, post-hard rock, power blues that he has carved his niche in since 1990's Still Got the Blues. He applies his throaty vocals and feral guitar to a pair of Muddy Waters tunes to impressive effect. No one will mistake his versions of Waters' "Walking Through the Park" or "Someday Baby" for the classic Chess era nuggets they are. Yet Moore's rocked up attack hits the mark for being relatively faithful to their melodies even as he wields his power blues sledgehammer. ...
| | Elvin Bishop Raisin' Hell: Live! CD (1977)
Dueling Banjos CD music
$6.55 Headliner Elvin Bishop's folksy, good-old-boy charm is as much a part of this upbeat live set as the music, thanks to generous doses of good-natured banter with fans. This live best-of collection, culled from five performances over almost a year, is highly entertaining. ...
| | Irma Thomas Story Of My Life CD (1997)
Dueling Banjos music CDs
$13.65 The Story of My LIfe stands out among latter-day Irma Thomas albums not only because she gives a consistently excellent performance, but because the record boasts three new songs from Dan Penn, who wrote some of the greatest soul songs of the '60s. While his new songs ("Hold Me While ...
| | Johnny "Guitar" Watson Hot Just Like TNT CD (1996) (Import) United Kingdom
Dueling Banjos songs
$16.79 Before Johnny "Guitar" Watson became a funk performer in the 1970s, renowned for wacky tunes such as "A Real Mother for Ya," the Texas-born singer/multi-instrumentalist was a proficient bluesman during the '50s and '60s. This 28-track Ace collection presents the finest moments from this early era in Watson's career, a time ...
| | Jimmy Witherspoon Blowin' In From Kansas City CD (1993) (Import) United Kingdom
Dueling Banjos album
$16.79
| | Umberto Tozzi Gloria CD (2005) (Import) Italy
Dueling Banjos CD music
$15.59
| | Masabumi Kikuchi Tethered Moon: Experiencing Tosca CD (2004) (Import)
Dueling Banjos music CDs
$16.95 To some of the more militant Euroclassical lovers, the very idea of approaching Giacomo Puccini's 1900 opera Tosca as avant-garde jazz is blasphemous -- the sort of thing that merits not a stiff sentence in purgatory, but eternal damnation without the possibility of parole. Period, end of story, that's all she wrote. But for pianist Masabumi Kikuchi, bassist Gary Peacock, and drummer Paul Motian -- the three improvisers who comprise the acoustic piano trio Tethered Moon -- Tosca isn't a museum piece that must remain under a sheet of ...
| | Billy Wright Don't You Want A Man Like Me? CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Dueling Banjos songs
$15.85
| | Runners-Hi Jack-In-The-Box CD (2006) (Import)
Dueling Banjos album
$24.95
| | Robots In Disguise Get Rid CD (2005)
Dueling Banjos CD music
$13.69
| | Patricio da Silva Hyper-Counterpoint CD (2009)
Dueling Banjos music CDs
$17.09 Solar Flare (2001)A large, dramatic curve driven by a rich but transparent texture, made of hundreds of glissandi (a glide between two different notes), covering the entire frequency range that can be represented on a typical CD. The original version of Solar Flare was composed for an eight-channel surround sound system.Radio Communications (2003-09)The idea for this cycle of pieces came when I noticed with compositional interest the “tunes” the stereo in my car would produce when driving through areas with poor reception. The resulting tunes would vary from a heavily filtered broadcast to pure noise patterns. The three movements of Radio Communications are essentially three fictional broadcasts, where the first movement suggests a folk-like tune heavily filtered, the second movement, the shortest of the set, brings an increased fragmentation of the radio signal translated into delicate granular counterpoint patterns, and the last movement, a rhythm based piece using colored noise as the only sound material.Artificial Life (2007-09)Artificial Life (2007-09), a two-part cycle of compositions for computer, describe how I have imagined the music of future machine societies. This cycle portrays the “before and after” of music traditions among intelligent machines. To underline such generation gap, a few symbols were emphasized: the first part, Artificial Life I-III, comes to life with sounds that will remind the listener of early computer sounds; the second part, Artificial Life IV: The New Generation unfolds a single movement featuring a larger ensemble of sound qualities, and employing, in contrast with the first part, a wide frequency range. Underlining the cultural gap between different eras, the conceptualization of time was also observed from contrasting angles. In the first part, different sections are outlined by sudden, abrupt changes in the rate of events: the flow of one time-line interjected and punctuated with the discourse from a different time-line. In the second part of the cycle, the concept of time has evolved and is now dynamically poly-metrical, run by multiple independent clocks, each with its own notion of time-unit (the tic of the clock). However, these clocks are somewhat unusual as the time-unit is in fact always progressively changing, either speeding up or slowing down to a target new tempo, thus allowing an ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|