| | Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr CD Ringo Starr Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Hard as it is to believe but there has not been a proper Ringo Starr hits collection since the first, 1975's Blast from Your Past -- that's not counting 1989's Starr Struck: Best of Ringo Starr, Vol. 2, which was designed as a companion to that earlier set -- until 2007's Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr. Blast from Your Past was released just five years after his debut, Sentimental Journey, but it ignored that collection of pop standards, along with much of its country cousin Beaucoups of Blues, winding up as a collection of highlights of 1973's Ringo and 1974's Goodnight Vienna, with a few non-LP hit singles rounded up within the LP's tight ten-track, 30-minute span. Ringo kept recording after Blast, working his way through several labels and ill-advised phases before settling into a nice, easy groove with 1993's Time Takes Time, but he stopped having hits not long after 1975, after the Elton John/Bernie Taupin "Snookeroo" climbed all the way to number three, capping off a remarkable streak of seven Top Ten singles. After that, the crash was fast: "Oo-Wee" was pulled off of Vienna and stalled at 31, then there was just one more hit -- "A Dose of Rock & Roll," peaking at 26 in 1976 -- before a five-year wait until the George Harrison-written "Wrack My Brain" limped to 38 in 1981 before Ringo disappeared from the charts. His '90s comeback may have never dented Billboard, but it is represented on the 20-track Photograph, which also contains all the aforementioned singles (apart from "Oo-Wee," no great loss) and the entirety of Blast from Your Past, albeit presented in a different running order. This doesn't just make for a compilation that's longer than the 1975 set, it makes for one that's better, since it adds the terrific "(It's All Down to) Good Night Vienna" to the mix, along with the amiable 1976 cover of Bruce Channel's "Hey Baby," a duet with Buck Owens on "Act Naturally" from 1989, and a well-chosen selection from each of Time Takes Time, 1998's Vertical Man, 2003's Ringorama, and 2005's Choose Love. This may not hit all the great stuff from the early '70s -- after all, the whole of Ringo is exceptionally strong -- but it does cut out all the real embarrassing stuff from the late '70s and just concentrates on the good latter-day material that holds its own with the best of his '70s hits. Far from merely being songs that are good when graded on a curve, these hits have aged really well, especially his originals: "It Don't Come Easy," th
Personnel: Ringo Starr (acoustic guitar); Buck Owens (vocals); Terry Christoffersen, Danny Kortchmar, Lon VanEaton, Mark Goldenberg, Peter Frampton, Reggie Young , Robbie Robertson, Robert Randolph , Stephen Stills, Bill Lloyd (guitar); Vini Poncia (acoustic guitar, background vocals); Gary Burr, John Lennon, Mark Hudson, Steve Dudas, Jimmy Calvert (acoustic guitar); Jesse Ed Davis , Steve Cropper, Mark Mirando (electric guitar); George Harrison (12-string guitar); Charlie McCoy (harmonica); Carl Fortuna (accordion); Ron Cattermole, Tom Scott (saxophone); Bobby Keys (tenor saxophone, horns); George Young , Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone); Louis del Gatto (baritone saxophone); Alan Young, Alan Rubin, Randy Brecker (trumpet); Dan Higgins, Gary Grant, Steve Madaio, Trevor Lawrence, Chuck Finley (horns); Elton John, Jim Shaw, Nicky Hopkins (piano); Billy Preston (Clavinet); Jim Cox (Wurlitzer organ); Gary Wright, Mac Rebennack, Benmont Tench, John Jarvis (keyboards); James Newton Howard (synthesizer); Cooker Lo Presti, Klaus Voorman, James "Hutch" Hutchinson, Doyle Curtsinger (bass instrument); Jim Keltner (drums); Derrek Van Eaton (percussion); Paul McCartney (unknown instrument); The Blackberries, Clydie King, Masst Alberts, Mad Mauries, Joe Bean, Linda Lawrence, Merry Clayton & Friends, Dultsch Heimer, Harry Nilsson, Joe Greene, Lesley Duncan, Madeline Bell, Martha Reeves, Melissa Manchester, Andy Sturmer, Pete Ham, Roger Manning, The Jordanaires, Tom Evans (background vocals). Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr Music Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr Music Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr Music Review Buy Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr CD Purchase Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Best Of George Harrison CD (1976)
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$13.69
| | Guns N' Roses Greatest Hits CD (2004) Remastered; Digipak
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$10.39
| | George Harrison Cloud Nine CD (1987) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$14.79 After a five-year hiatus from recording, ...
| | Electric Light Orchestra A New World Record - Expanded Edition CD (1976) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$7.59
| | Traveling Wilburys Collection CDs (1988) With DVD
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$21.19
| | Paul McCartney Memory Almost Full CD (2007)
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$10.99
| | Johnny Thunders In The Flesh CD (2000)
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$14.45
| | 2nd South Carolina String Band Southern Soldier CD (1997)
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
$20.29 Robert E. Lee once said, "We couldn't have an army without music." Throughout history, music has always been of great importance to the military. The American Civil War was no exception. Critical group activities such as drilling and marching were taught to rhythm so as to forge automatic responses by constant repetition - an effective tool for teaching troops maneuvers needed for going into battle. Bugle calls and drum figures were components of music used to instruct new recruits and to guide veteran soldiers in the field.But perhaps the most important use of music was not on the parade ground or battlefield. Often in war there are long periods between battles spent waiting in camp or bivouac. Boredom was one of the soldier's worst enemies and music in camp was one of his principal antidotes. On campaign, regimental brass bands and field musicians playing fife and drum performed on the march and in bivouac. In winter quarters it was the camp band or minstrel troupe's job to keep up morale. Every brigade had its own minstrel show, with commanders trading or commandeering the best talent for their band.The 2nd South Carolina String Band is a true recreation of such a camp band. These musicians originally met as did those among the volunteers of 1861 - as riflemen in a company of infantry. This band was formed as theirs was - to entertain themselves and their comrades around the campfire. Since 1989 when they first began to play together, some of the founding members have retired and some new men joined, but the music has continued to improve and flourish.Regarded by many as the best band of their kind, they have played in concert and at period dances at nearly all of the major national reenactments of the last ten years, for fund raisers as at the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia, and at the dedication ceremonies for the last two monuments to ever be placed at Gettysburg National Battlefield Park. Their music can also be heard in two of Ken Burns' films, JAZZ and MARK TWAIN, as well as in performance and on the sound track of Ted Turner's GODS &GENERALS. The 2nd South Carolina String Band is one of the most active and popular Civil War camp bands in America today. With three albums and an ...
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Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
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Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
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| | Papa Grows Funk Mr. Patterson's Hat CD (2007) (Import)
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
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| | Jane Quartet Parker Whisper Of Love A Whisper Of Hate CD (2007) (Import)
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
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| | Inkubus Sukkubus Science & Nature CD (2007) (Import) Digipak
Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr
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| | Singer Pur Adrian Willaert: Musica Nova CDs (2009) (Import) Import
$38.09 |
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