| | Ryan Adams Easy Tiger CD Ryan Adams Discography of CDs
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Audio Mixer: Jamie Candiloro. Recording information: Electric Lady Studios, New York, NY. Photographers: Phillip Andelman; Neal Casal; Andy West ; Jon Graboff. Ever since his 2001 breakout, Ryan Adams has been a critical lightning rod and a PR disaster. From infamous onstage fits and a barrage of albums simultaneously prolific and scatterbrained, Adams's relationship with fame was bristly at best. Even the I-was-this-close-to-dying drug confessions that immediately pre-dated the release of this record seemed like a clumsy bid for Keith Richards-style rockitude. Critics and even frustrated fans all seemed to agree: the kid has talent, but he's very annoying. In this milieu, Adams drops EASY TIGER--his ninth record of the decade--with a title that suggests that he and everyone else should take a step back and reassess. Fans will rejoice: EASY TIGER--recorded with his backing band, the Cardinals--is the closest Adams has sounded to the style on his excellent debut, HEARTBREAKER. His ADD genre approach is on display here--from the lazy, AMERICAN BEAUTY-style bluegrass of "Pearls on a String" to the full-roar power pop of "Halloweenhead" to the blue-eyed-soul duet with Sheryl Crow, "Two." The songs are tight and to the point; almost all are uniformly great; and all serve to bolster his case for "importance" as a songwriter that years of overt trying have failed to yield. Seems like "easy, tiger" is that successful approach Adams has been looking so hard for. Easy Tiger has a "slow it down there, pal" undertone to its title -- and who needs a word of caution other than Ryan Adams himself, who notoriously spread himself far and wide in the years following his 2000 breakthrough Heartbreaker. After celebrating his 30th birthday with a flurry of albums in one year, Adams decided to pull back, hunker down, and craft one solid album that deliberately plays to his strength. As such, Easy Tiger could easily be seen as the album that many of his fans have wanted to hear since Heartbreaker, a record that is tight and grounded in country-rock. Easy Tiger is focused, but so have been some of the other thematic albums Adams has delivered with such gusto -- when he tried to run with the Strokes on Rock N Roll, mimicked the Smiths and Jeff Buckley on Love Is Hell, even turned out a full-on country album in Jacksonville City Nights, complete with knowing retro cover art, he stayed true to his concept -- but the cumulative effect of the records was to make him seem scattered, even if the records could work on their own merits. With each album since the wannabe blockbuster of 2001's Gold, his restlessness has seemed not diverse but reckless, so even his good albums seemed to contribute to the mess. Easy Tiger intends to break this perception by being concise, right down to how every one but one of these tight 13 songs clock in somewhere between the two-and-a-half and three-and-a-half minute mark. For somebody as doggedly conceptual as Adams, this is surely a deliberate move, one designed to shore up support among supporters (no matter if they're fans or critics), which Easy Tiger very well might. Surely, it is a welcoming album in many ways, partially due to the relaxed Deadhead vibe Adams strikes up with his band the Cardinals, reminiscent of 2005's fine Cold Roses. But if that CD sprawled, this one is succinct, as Adams flits through country-rockers and weepers -- plus the occasional rock detour, like anthemic '80s arena rocker "Halloween Head" or the spacy "The Sun Also Sets," a dead ringer for Grant Lee Phillips -- containing not an ounce of fat. Adams benefits from the brevity, most notably on the sweetly melancholy "Everybody Knows," the straight-up country of "Tears of Gold," or on "Two," which mines new material out of the timeworn "two become one" conceit. Here, his songs don't stick around longer than necessary, so they linger longer in memory, but the relentless onward march of Easy Tiger also gives the performances an efficSpin (p.96) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "You get deep-twang country rock, fuzzy new-wave pop, a little old-school mountain music, and a handful of acoustic emo-folk ballads." Entertainment Weekly (p.139) - "EASY TIGER keeps it simple: beguiling melodies, an ace band, and Adams' elastic tenor." -- Grade: A- Uncut (p.114) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Adams appears more at ease in his own skin, soothing himself into these 13 songs rather than straining hard....EASY TIGER feels like a more assured follow-up to the countrified COLD ROSES." Alternative Press (p.178) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Adams often finds himself revisiting past glories on EASY TIGER....A rather pleasing listen..." CMJ (p.41) - "Backed by his trusty band, the Cardinals, Adams continues to touch hearts with woeful tales of love-gone-wrong." No Depression (p.92) - "'Two Hearts' is as catchy a piece of country-rock as a Flying Burrito Brother could have imagined, and the execution is flawless." Q (Magazine) (p.78) - Ranked #27 in Q's "The 50 Best Albums Of 2007" -- "[T]hese 14 compact, tuneful songs slip by with a deceptive, but pleasing ease." Easy Tiger Music | List Price | $13.95 (You save $2.30) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Alt Country CDs, Rock | | Label | Mercury Nashville | | Orig Year | 2007 | | All Time Sales Rank | 7813  | | CD Universe Part number | 7425150 | | Catalog number | 000876002 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Jun 26, 2007 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Jamie Candiloro; Jamie Candiloro | | Engineer | Jamie Candiloro; Bill Mims; Charlie Stavish | | Recording Time | 38 minutes | | Personnel | Sheryl Crow |
Ryan Adams Easy Tiger Songs Easy Tiger Music Review Average Rating: (4.7 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews bad marketing with "Easy Tiger" First off, let me say, after my initial dissapointment I find this to be Ryan's best and most cohesive, sober, works since his Whiskytown days
that being said, I bought the album based on the first single, "Everybody Knows", a beautiful twangy electric mid-tempo song with a very passionate vocal delivery and great harmonies.
however, that, I was to learn, is a re-recorded radio version unavailable for sale anywhere, in it's place on the album is a sub-par acoustic version of the song with a lacklustre vocal
the label would do well to include the single version on all future copies or replace it in place of the album version. otherwise i's simply false advertisement.
it all works out in the end, simply because the rest of the record is so well done. Submitted by Bryant (Los Angeles, CA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
Another hit!!! This guy just keeps rolling out quality albums like it's no effort.Some great songs on this one....."Two" could be his breakthrough country hit but I suspect that the CMA snubs their nose at this outlaw songwriter because he refuses to be labeled a certain type of music.This CD has remained at the top of the Americana charts since it came out. Submitted by Mahgeetah (Martinsville VA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Win Win Win ..... Mr Adams you can do no wrong! Another gem from America's finest. GREAT songs. GREAT band. Love it Ryan! Keep 'em coming! Submitted by Brian (Dublin, Ireland) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Great job man! I've always loved this guy. I'm trying to remember which album of his I actually heard first. I think it was Strangers Almanac, which is great, then Pneumonia, which I never could quite understand, like say Demolition, & then I bought the expanded version of Faithless Street, which is awesome. From there it's Gold(what's the fuss), Heartbreaker(loose), & on down the line. Both Cold Roses & Jacksonville City Nights just don't fail to move ya' & then there's Easy Tiger. I bought this a year ago when it came out & thought it was ok, especially for Ryan being sober now. After reading about a new album coming out with a 7" single included, I thought I would give Easy Tiger another spin & gee, it shows a new maturity in Mr. Adams. Great album. Submitted by billkey (rogers, ar usa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Not his best but Still Ripper Dipper Stuff another great album from an enormous talent. Takes some listening to, some songs grab you straight away, Goodnight Rose,Sun Also sets, others take some listening but once you 'get ' the lyrics you fall in love with them. Looking forward to a great concert performance! Submitted by petenvy (Melbourne Vic. Australia) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Easy Tiger CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ryan Adams Heartbreaker CD (2000)
Easy Tiger
$12.95 Personnel: Ryan Adams (vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, banjo, harmonica, piano); Ryan Adams; Gillian Welch (vocals, acoustic guitar, banjo, electric bass, bass guitar); Allison Pearce, Allison Pierce (vocals); Pat Sansone (piano, organ, chamberlin, background ...
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$14.89 Personnel includes: Marvin Gaye, Tammi Terrell, Kim Weston (vocals); The Vandellas (background vocals). Producers include: Smokey Robinson, Ashford & Simpson, Ivy Jo Hunter, Norman Whitfield, Harvey Fuqua. Compilation producer: Harry Weinger. Includes liner notes by David Ritz. Personnel: Marvin Gaye (vocals); Kim Weston, Tammi Terrell (vocals). Liner Note Author: David Ritz. Marvin Gaye left behind one of the greatest legacies in American pop music, a fascinating and irresistible string of chart hits and stunning album-long suites that explored the sacred/secular divide in his own soul, and by extension, the philosophical divide in the American psyche, and he did it all with grace, ease, assurance, and style. This double-disc anthology hits the obvious high points, but also is deep enough to include some rarities (like the wonderful What's Going On footnote song "Where Are We Going?"), live tracks (his famous live performance of "Distant Lover" from an Oakland concert is included), a generous selection ...
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The Replacements: Slim Dunlap, Chris Mars, Tommy Stinson, Paul Westerberg. Additional personnel: Steve Berlin, Michael Blair, John Cale, Charley Drayton, Abe Lincoln, Mauro Majellan, Johnette Napolitano, Axel Niehaus, Terry Reid, David Schramm, Benmont Tench. The 2008 expanded edition's bonus tracks include demo and alternative versions of eight album tracks, plus three previously unreleased cuts that further illuminate the portrait of a great American band's swan song. The Replacements: Chris Mars, Paul Westerberg, Tommy Stinson. Personnel: Abe Lincoln, Dave Schramm, John Cale, Johnette Napolitano, Mauro Majellan, Michael Blair, Slim Dunlap, Steve Berlin, Axel Niehaus, Terry Reid, Benmont Tench, Charley Drayton. Audio Mixers: Jay Healy; Scott Litt; Brian Paulson. Audio Remasterer: Dave Schultz. The Replacements had pretty much fallen apart by the time of the ALL SHOOK DOWN sessions. The album was originally planned as leader Paul Westerberg's first solo release, and it's filled with session players, while there's only one track on which all the other Replacements play together. Nevertheless released as a Replacements album (their last), it features a couple of upbeat pop-rockers that could have come off DON'T TELL A SOUL ("Merry-Go-Round," "When It Began") and a couple of raw, Stonesy tunes, but it's dominated by dark, low-key, often acoustic-based songs, pointing the way toward Westerberg's official solo career. Battered and broken from the debacle of Don't Tell a Soul -- the album's failure to take off, followed by a disastrous tour supporting Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers -- the Replacements were on their last legs when it came time for 1990's All Shook Down, so worn down that the band ceased to exist for most intents and purposes. Paul Westerberg even began recording the album as a solo project with R.E.M. producer Scott Litt, gradually turning it into the final Replacements album. It may bear the band's name, but All Shook Down never quite shakes the feeling of a solo album; above all, it's a writers album, with the focus placed entirely on the songs. To a certain extent, that was true of the ballad-heavy Don't Tell a Soul, but that felt over-thought from its conception to execution, where there is a light touch to All Shook Down, despite its plethora of guest musicians, ...
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