| | Corey Stevens Albertville CD Corey Stevens Discography of CDs
Corey Stevens Albertville Songs | 1. | A Real Good Sign |
| 2. | That's What The Blues Is |
| 3. | Another Pretty Face |
| 4. | Blue Suede Shoes |
| 5. | Breaking Up |
| 6. | Cold Women With Cold Hearts |
| 7. | I Get Evil |
| 8. | Little Brother |
| 9. | Got To Be Some Changes Made |
| 10. | Nice To Be Nice |
| Albertville Review
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Purchase Albertville CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Blackfoot Siogo CD (1983)
Albertville album
$10.49 Blackfoot was always the heaviest of the great Southern rock movement, and on Siogo(reputedly either a Native American word for "closeness" or a crude groupie acronym, probably the latter) the boys try to break into the metal market and regain their brief hold on American audiences. Staunch metallists will recognize the touch of producer Al Nalli (from Axe's similarly excellent Nemesis) and a new bit of European muscle from Uriah Heep's Ken Hensley on the keyboards. Although cliched throughout, powerful performances send openers "Send Me an Angel," "Run for Cover," and "Drivin' Fool" to lofty hard rock heights. "We're Goin' Down" nips the riff from "Double Vision," ...
| | Blackfoot Highway Song: Live CD (1982)
Albertville CD music
$10.49 Like their Native American ancestors before them, the members of Blackfoot must have known what it felt like to be exiled from their homeland. Only, rather than being forced into an Indian reservation, the world's first all-Native American hard rock band found itself trying to scrape together a good wage across the pond, where U.K. audiences couldn't seem to get enough of its uniquely metallic, Skynyrd-derived Southern rock. Despite experiencing diminishing returns in the good ol' U.S. of A., all three of their studio albums for Atco had been warmly embraced here, leading to nearly two years of incessant touring. Such acclaim eventually led to demands for a live album, which the band duly recorded with the help of the Rolling Stones' mobile studio during a three-month jaunt across the British Isles in 1982. Named Highway Song Live after the band's biggest (and most "Freebird"-like) hit, ...
| | Blackfoot Vertical Smiles CD (1984)
Albertville music CDs
$10.49 Although they'd managed to become bona fide second-division stars in England, where their incomparably heavy brand of Southern rock and devastating live performances had thrilled nostalgic Skynyrd disciples and open-minded metalheads alike, Blackfoot had made dispiritingly little commercial headway in their own backyard: the American market. So as pressure mounted to deliver a hit for their label, Atco, Rickey Medlocke decided to invite former Uriah Heep keyboard player Ken Hensley to join the band -- a calculated move intended to modernize the group's sound for the synth-happy 1980s. But 1983's Siogo, though seemingly a passable compromise, still failed to yield any hits, so Blackfoot were literally put on notice prior to getting to work on their next effort, which was rejected upon initial delivery under the working title of Cry of the Banshee. The band was ordered back into the studio to try again, only without founding second ...
| | Henry Paul Feel The Heat CD (1980)
Albertville songs
$10.49 Whatever happened to Henry Paul between the release of his band's debut album in 1979 and Feel the Heat in 1980 wasn't healthy. Whereas Grey Ghost was a record full of influences ranging from the Eagles to the Byrds to the Allmans and Lynyrd Skynrd tossed into a Southern-fried salad with Paul's own country, rock, and folk sensibilities, Feel the Heat feels like jarhead, clichéd Southern boogie rock. All the gorgeous harmonies, complex dynamics, tight songs, and sparking arrangements have been tossed over in favor of a heavy-handed collection of tired riffs, stupid lyrics, and themes that are saturated with drinking, picking up girls, and yeah, "Let's R-O-C-K." A harder edge isn't the problem; there's nothing wrong with turning up the volume, unless you leave your imagination behind in the process and settle for a lowest common denominator set of songs and even worse rock & ...
| | Joe Bonamassa Blues Deluxe CD (2003)
Albertville album
$13.89
| | Coco Montoya Dirty Deal CD (2007)
Albertville CD music
$14.15
| | Don Preston Transformation CD (2001)
Albertville music CDs
$14.59 Pianist Don Preston's jazz pedigree is a little bit strange. Despite having spent time in the 1950s hanging around with such respected figures as Tommy Flanagan and Elvin Jones, he's probably best-known as longtime keyboardist for Frank Zappa and one of the original members of the Mothers of Invention. That digression from the jazz mainstream didn't come out of nowhere; as early as the mid-'50s he was helping Paul Bley and Charlie Haden redefine the parameters ...
| | Sergio Mendes Equinox CD (1967) Special Packaging; Remastered
Albertville songs
$15.29
| | Johnny "Guitar" Watson Best Of The Okeh Years CD (2004)
Albertville album
$10.69
| | Blue Flagships Live Featuring Jimmy "T99" Nelson CD (2006) Import
Albertville CD music
$13.45
| | Jewel J That's My Shugga Daddy CD (2007)
$14.09 | | Costa Cordalis Hautnah-Die Geschichten Meiner Stars CD (2007) (Import)
Albertville music CDs
$19.69
| | El De Ramon Ortiz Ya Me Acostumbre CD (2007)
$11.19 |
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