| | Paul Rodgers Live In Glasgow CD Paul Rodgers Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Former Bad Company vocalist Paul Rodgers had a smashing comeback year in 2005, playing sold-out gigs with the band Queen and then touring the world in 2006 with his own band. That world tour was captured on film, and this album culls the best audio tracks from the companion DVD. Not only is Rodgers in fine vocal form on Bad Company hits like "Feel Like Makin' Love" and "All Right Now," but his band--including 17-year-old guitarist Kurtis Dengler--is smoking.
Personnel: Paul Rodgers (guitar); Kurtis Dengler, Howard Leese (guitar); Lynn Sorensen (bass guitar); Ryan Hoyle (drums).
Paul Rodgers Live In Glasgow Songs Live In Glasgow Music Review Purchase Live In Glasgow CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Blackfoot Highway Song Live CD (1982)
Live In Glasgow album
$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 ...
| | Alexis Korner Kornerstoned: Anthology 1958-1983 CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Live In Glasgow CD music
$24.79
| | Marshall Tucker Band Live On Long Island 04/18/80 CDs (2006)
Live In Glasgow music CDs
$19.09
| | Free Live At The BBC CD (2006) (Import)
Live In Glasgow songs
$30.19
| | Paul Rodgers - Live In Glasgow DVD (2005) DTS Sound
Live In Glasgow album
$11.85
| | Robin Trower Seven Moons CD (2008) Digipak
Live In Glasgow CD music
$12.89
| | Kiss Asylum CD (1985) Remastered
Live In Glasgow music CDs
$6.49
| | Dixieland Greats CD (2000) Box Set
Live In Glasgow songs
$19.79
| | Tea In Marrakech CD (2001) (Import)
Live In Glasgow album
$18.99
| | Favorite Love Songs From The Slow Jams Collection CD (2000)
Live In Glasgow CD music
$4.95
| | Front 242 Pulse CD (2003)
Live In Glasgow music CDs
$12.95 Front 242 never allowed the commercial world to embrace them, pulling back from the brink in 1993 with a pair of radical, difficult albums just as the rest of middle America appeared ready to embrace the Deutsch darlings of 120 Minutes. Since they undoubtedly had little to fear from the mainstream ...
| | Sachiko Kawana Yamino Kaikyo CD (2006) (Import)
$18.39 | | Desoto Reds Hanglide Thru Yer Window CD (2004)
Live In Glasgow songs
$13.89 Singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Alex Sterling's band Desoto Reds continues its quirky journey into neo-prog rock on Hanglide Thru Yer Window. Musically, Sterling most overtly displays the influence of Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd and Barrett's abortive solo career; listening to this album, you'd think Sterling's favorite LP was Barrett's The Madcap Laughs. The arrangements have the same thrown-together feel, the run-on melodies the same unstructured progressions, and Sterling's fey tenor recalls Barrett's. The difference may be that Sterling is doing deliberately what the drug-addled and mentally deranged Barrett did instinctively. Barrett isn't the only influence that comes to ear, however. The abrupt arrangement of "Hot Air Balloon" suggests he's been listening to Kurt Weill. (Well, maybe not directly; more likely he heard "Alabama Song" on a Doors album.) "The Gardener" has some of the feel of early Devo with its clanky rhythms. And if, as usual, all roads lead back to the Beatles, you'd have to say that the calliope-like sound of "Tupper in the Fridge" implied Sterling's favorite Fab Four songs were "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" and "She Said She Said." He achieves the sound of 1967 London through honest means, employing such old-tech instruments as a Moog synthesizer, with its dissonant squiggles filling holes in the sound picture here and there. And there are plenty of holes; Sterling favors spare arrangements and simple (if changing) rhythm patterns that give the tracks an unfinished feel. The music tends to overwhelm his undemonstrative singing, which means his lyrics don't get the emphasis they should. He writes entertaining if sophomoric verse full of fantasy; he's as interested in the sounds of words as in their meaning, if not more so. The album's first song, "Allowed Loud," begins, "Fell pell-mell from a predicate suitcase/Ooze willy-nilly in her general direction," and that couplet is a good indication of what's to come. Hanglide Thru Yer Window reveals Desoto Reds as a band that is still more a concept in Alex Sterling's mind than a realized entity, but it has its charms. ~ William Ruhlmann
"The Desoto Reds have a calling: to remind us that brainy white people's music can be fun. (If you listened to nothing but Radiohead, who could stand your company?) Alex Sterling and company continue to delight and refresh with their original mix of ideas and sound on Hanglide Thru Yer Window, their third release."- Carrie Mason, West Coast Performer "It can be startling when a band so blindingly talented rips open your ears in new ways. It can be scary (how is it possible to hear things this new way), angering (someone is now making music better than my ex-favorite how dare they replace ...
|
|
|