| | Small, Gary & The Coyote' Bros Crazy Woman Mountain CD Small, Gary & The Coyote' Bros Discography of CDs
News Flash!!! Crazy Woman Mountain just won the Nammy Award for "Best Rock Album or the Year"!!!!Gary Small & the Coyote Bros are led by Singer/Songwriter/guitarist Gary Small. Small is also Native American and a member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe in Montana. Crazy Woman Mountain is Small's fourth CD release. His last three releases: “Cheyenne Blue Revisited” “Wild Indians” and “Blues From the Coyote” were collectively nominated for seven Native American Music Association Awards. Small also won the prestigious “Song Writer of the Year” Nammy Award for “Wild Indians” in 2002.Each CD has its own musical style: The Award winning “Wild Indians” is deeply steeped in roots rock reggae and Afro Cuban beats. The album also stars former 10 year drummer for Santana, Graham Lear. The CD was released in Portland OR where one music critic summed up the release:"...Small's guitar playing so reminiscent of Carlos Santana it's stunning. In fact it wouldn't be unfair to say Small could become the Santana of Native American music-translating his history through myriad musical forms in a way that speaks on several levels."John Graham, Willamette Week, 2001Small, not one for being pigeon holed for style has released “Crazy Woman Mountain”: a stripped down retro rock with guitar work reminiscent of Brian Setzer, Rev. Horton Heat and Duane Eddy. Small’s talent in this genre brought him an invitation to play the 8th annual Native American Music Awards “Tribute to Link Wray”. Wray a legend amongst rock guitarists everywhere passed away in 2004. Currently Small’s performance with Link Wray’s grandson, Chris Webb is being broadcast on many PBS stations across America.The new release is another shining example of how skilled and diverse Gary Small’s musical talents are. Crazy Woman Mountain Music Small, Gary & The Coyote' Bros Crazy Woman Mountain Songs | 1. | Pink Flamingos |
| 2. | No-Daka Girls |
| 3. | Redneck Swingin' |
| 4. | Jake the Bull Snake |
| 5. | Camilla Tequilla |
| 6. | Crazy Woman Mountain |
| 7. | Coyote' Lovin' |
| 8. | Cash Cow |
| 9. | Carlos Can't Surf |
| 10. | Me and My Bigsby |
| Crazy Woman Mountain Review
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Purchase Crazy Woman Mountain CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Gov't Mule By A Thread CD (2009)
Crazy Woman Mountain
$12.29 BY A THREAD is Gov't Mule's first studio album since HIGH & MIGHTY was issued in 2006. Since that time, bassist Andy Hess has been replaced by Jorgen Carlsson, though Hess appears on two tracks at the end of the album. Carlsson's playing style is much more aggressive than Hess', and is therefore closer - in spirit anyway - to Gov't Mule's original bassist, the late Allen Woody, though he possesses an adventurous sense of time and is harmonically more colorful than either Woody or Hess. Carlsson and drummer Matt Abst are a solid match, since Abst is a drummer used to shifting time signatures and allowing the unexpected in while still driving a band. The band's keyboardist and rhythm guitarist, Danny Louis, is a shape-shifter, playing to whatever is needed in a given track. His manner of coloring sounds inside and around a particular tune's framework is a large part of what makes Gov't Mule's sound so fresh here - despite the fact that they don't stray far from what they do best. Warren Haynes and his guitar are, as usual, front and center, his guitar screaming, his big throaty growl hammering down lyrics like a Southern fire-and-brimstone preacher with earthshaking soul. The material on this set is tight; there is less jamming but Gordie Johnson's production and mixing equalize everything at ten, making it feel like the disc is recorded live.
The set opens with the pulsing ...
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| | Journey Greatest Hits CD (1988) Bonus Track; Remastered; Digipak
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$9.29 This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players.
Along with Styx and REO Speedwagon, Journey ruled the charts and radio airwaves in the early '80s. And like the aforementioned bands, Journey began in the '70s, so obviously the compilers of its 1988 GREATEST HITS release had a lot of material to choose from.
Journey's sound was a merger of hard rock, compliments of guitarist Neal Schon, and the melodic pop/ballads of singer Steve Perry. This resulted in such classic rock radio staples as "Any Way You Want It," "Separate Ways," "Open Arms," "Don't Stop Believin'," "Wheel in the Sky," and "Who's Crying Now," all included here.
Greatest Hits is an excellent, thorough 14-track collection containing all of Journey's big hits, from 1978's "Wheel in the Sky" to 1986's "I'll Be Alright Without You." Although the songs aren't presented in chronological order and a handful of minor hits ("Suzanne," "Walks Like a Lady") aren't included, it doesn't matter, since every essential Journey single -- "Only the Young," "Don't Stop Believin'," "Any Way You Want It," "Separate Ways," ...
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| | Vagrant Saints CD (2004)
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$13.15 ...Creeping up from the depths of Georgia, crawling across the desert from LaLa-Land, and down through the rust belt...via the swamps of Louisiana, the skyscrapers of Manhattan and various points of heaven and hell in between, these guys eventually collide, congeal and fester in a lean-to shack on the outer edges ...
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| | Bill Staines Old Dogs CD (2007)
Crazy Woman Mountain
$14.55 Bill Staines has been singing and writing first-rate songs for most of his life and while many A-list country and folk artists have cut his tunes, he still remains largely unknown outside of folk circles. Old Dogs probably won't change that, but it's another excellent album full of finely crafted songs and well chosen covers that showcase Staines' beautiful high tenor and understated fingerpicking. Staines isn't a singer who bowls you over, but his comforting vocals and melancholy melodies slowly insinuate themselves into your heart and leave you feeling warm and comfy, like an old friend who always shows up with good stories and a bottle of wine. "The Heavens and the Years" is a solemn meditation on aging, with Staines' stately piano and subtle churchy organ adding to the song's sanctified feel. "Old Dogs" sings the praises of a life well lived, with humor and compassion, "Savannah" is an ode to a beautiful aging city with a quiet bluegrass arrangement to augment Staines' tranquil vocals and the gracious Southern poetry of the lyric. "Once We Walked" is a poignant song about a long marriage that's weathered time to bind two souls ever closer together. It's the most affecting song on the album marked by Staines' intimate vocal, quiet soulful and profound. Staines also has a winning way with covers. "Cotton Pickin'" is a charming medley of Elizabeth Cotten's "Freight Train" and "Oh Babe It Ain't No Lie." Guy Clark's "Lone Star Hotel Café," the tale of a romance that never quite happened, is given a quiet arrangement full of subtle fiddle and dobro, and John Stewart's "Cody," a song about a homeless musician with mental problems, is given a simple poignant reading. The songs ...
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