| | Coasters Down Home CD Coasters Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Although they had charted in the Top 40 ten times between 1957 and 1961, by 1966 the Coasters were desperate for a hit and reunited with producers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller for a session that produced the delightful and clever (how often do you hear Thelonious Monk name-checked in a song lyric?) "Soul Pad." The song, good as it was, went nowhere. The Coasters continued to work with Leiber & Stoller at sessions in 1967 and 1968, tracking songs like their clattering version of the Dixie Belles' "(Down at) Papa Joe's," and then at a last session in 1971, they cut a cover of "Love Potion Number Nine," which actually reached number 76 on the pop charts that year in what was to be the Coasters' final appearance on the list. In all, the Coasters cut some dozen songs with Leiber & Stoller between 1966 and 1971, and these were originally collected and released as an LP called The Coasters on Broadway (since all of the recording sessions had been held in New York City) by King Records in 1972. This set is simply the King album remastered and renamed Down Home, and for all practical purposes, it should be considered the Coasters' swan song, at least as a viable recording unit (touring versions of the Coasters will no doubt persist into the 22nd century). "Soul Pad" is here, and while it now seems a tad dated, it's still a wonderful recording. Also here is the Coasters' version of "Love Potion" and several serviceable but hardly innovative covers of songs like "Mustang Sally," "On Broadway," "The In Crowd" and "Cool Jerk," as well as "(Down at) Papa Joe's," which has weathered the years surprisingly well. The end result is hardly an essential Coasters' album and is really more of an archival and historical footnote. That said, it's far from embarrassing, and "Soul Pad" in particular is worth seeking out, if only to hear a legendary vocal group sing the name of Thelonious Monk as part of a lyric and actually pull it off. ~ Steve Leggett Coasters Down Home Songs | 1. | Soul Pad |
| 2. | Down Home Girl |
| 3. | Talkin' 'Bout a Woman |
| 4. | Mohair Sam |
| 5. | Everybody's Woman |
| 6. | D.W. Washburn |
| 7. | Love Potion Number Nine |
| 8. | (Down at) Papa Joe's |
| 9. | Cool Jerk |
| 10. | Mustang Sally |
| 11. | On Broadway |
| 12. | in Crowd, The |
| Purchase Down Home CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Johnny Otis 1945-1947 CD (2002)
Down Home album
$18.05 Growing up among Afro-Americans in Berkeley, CA, Greek-American Johnny Otis (born John Veliotes) always identified strongly with people of color. Before he had attained the age of 20 he was gigging with black jazz bands throughout the Southwest, and eventually organized an ensemble deliberately patterned after Count Basie's orchestra. This highly charged album of historical musical artifacts documents the very beginning of Johnny Otis' ...
| | Philly Steps: Phila-La Of Soul & Arctic Records Remixed Hits CD (2004)
Down Home CD music
$12.89 Jamie/Guyden Dist. ...
| | Arthur Conley Sweet Soul Music/Shake, Rattle & Roll CD (2004)
Down Home music CDs
$10.69
| | Alexis Korner Kornerstoned: Anthology 1958-1983 CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Down Home songs
$24.79
| | B B King Mr. Blues/Confessin' The Blues CD (2005) (Import) Remastered; United Kingdom
Down Home album
$18.79 This CD contains B.B. King's first ABC-Paramount studio efforts -- Mr. Blues (1962) and Confessin' the Blues (1965), respectively. While there are inevitable similarities between the projects, offering them back-to-back allows listeners an acute sense of King's rapid maturation and development during what was by all accounts the nexus of the guitarist/vocalist's career. The dozen-song Mr. Blues was a haphazard start for King with the contents taken from three different recording sessions in a 13-month period (March 1, 1962 through April 11, 1963). Based on the results, the artist was being presented as a blues shouter, supported by an antiquated big band and/or orchestra. Arguably the best of the lot comes from the Maxwell Davis ...
| | Gants Introducing... CD (2005)
Down Home CD music
$11.59 Sundazed's 2006 release Introducing the Gants rounds up 16 rarities that the Southern garage rock band recorded between 1965 and 1967. Apart from the opening pair of "Another Chance" and "What's Your Name" -- the A- and B-sides, respectively, of a single they released on Statue in 1967 -- this is all previously unreleased material, including the first recording sessions at Sam Phillips' recording studio in 1965. The mere existence of ...
| | Oyang Fifi Best 30 CD (2001) (Import) Japan
$39.39 | | No Doubt Boom Box CDs (2003) Limited Edition; Box Set
Down Home music CDs
$35.49
| | Ralph Diekemper Solo Improvisation CD (2005)
Down Home songs
$16.45
| | Pantheist Pains Of Sleep CD (2007)
Down Home album
$16.29
| | Radical Re-Interpretations Vol. 1-Transformation Of Hits CD (2007)
Down Home CD music
$12.96
| | Code Geass Lelouch:Sound Episode 5 (Mini LP Sleeve CD (2007) (Import)
Down Home music CDs
$31.55 Comes in a sleeve case.
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