| | David Brinston Dirty Woman CD David Brinston Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Recording information: Ecko Sound Studios, Memphis, TN.
Photographer: Pat Ryan.
Personnel: John Ward (guitar); Sherilena Banks, J. Blackfoot, Morris Williams (background vocals).
Audio Mixer: Till Palmer.
David Brinston Dirty Woman Songs | 1. | Something I Want |
| 2. | I Finally Got a Good Woman |
| 3. | You Caught Me with My Drawers Off |
| 4. | Give It to Me |
| 5. | I Came to the Party |
| 6. | Dirty Woman - (featuring J. Blackfoot) |
| 7. | When I Put the Icing on the Cake |
| 8. | Back Up Man |
| 9. | I'm Still Waiting |
| 10. | I'm Faithful to My Baby |
| 11. | Don't Tease Me with It |
| 12. | Something I Want - (Remix, remix, featuring Ms. Jody) |
| Purchase Dirty Woman CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Johnny Otis 1945-1947 CD (2002)
Dirty Woman album
$18.05
| | Philly Steps: Phila-La Of Soul & Arctic Records Remixed Hits CD (2004)
Dirty Woman CD music
$12.85
| | Jan & Dean Surf City/Dead Man's Curve CD (2004) (Import) United Kingdom
Dirty Woman music CDs
$18.49 This two-fer from Beat Goes On features a pair of out-of-print Jan & Dean Liberty LP's: Surf City and Dead Man's Curve/The New Girl in School originally released in 1963 and 1964, respectively. Included among the 24 songs are the hits "Surf City," "Honolulu Lulu," "Dead Man's Curve" and "Linda," along ...
| | J J Jackson But It's Alright CD (1967)
Dirty Woman songs
$9.95 Soul belter J.J. Jackson is best known for his 1967 smash, "But It's Alright," but he has some fine singles and a couple of excellent albums as well, and 1967's But It's Alright on the Calla label is one of them. Kicking ...
| | Alexis Korner Kornerstoned: Anthology 1958-1983 CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Dirty Woman album
$24.79
| | B B King Mr. Blues/Confessin' The Blues CD (2005) (Import) Remastered; United Kingdom
Dirty Woman CD music
$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 ...
| | Nick Brignola All Business CD (1999)
Dirty Woman music CDs
$13.79 Brignola's burly, bossy, brash, broad ranging baritone sax sound is intact and quite pronounced, as always, on this, yet another one of his excellent recordings, the ninth for the Reservoir label. This time around Nick and his knights go into battle on five standards, three penned by the leader and one from electric guitarist Chuck D'Aloia, who plays on five tracks. Vibist Dave Pike is heard throughout, mostly as a soloist, while bassist John Patitucci and drummer Billy Hart do their usual stellar job. Brignola's opener ...
| | Michael Roach Ain't Got Me No Home CD (1995)
Dirty Woman songs
$13.85
| | As De La Sierra El Pesudo CD (2008)
Dirty Woman album
$5.55
| | Dismember Where Ironcrosses Grow CD (2004) (Import) Import; United Kingdom
Dirty Woman CD music
$18.39 WHERE IRONCROSSES GROW is the 10-track release by Swedish death metallists Dismember, featuring "Where Iron Crosses Grow," "Forged With Hate," and "Sword Of Light."
The Scandinavian death metal/black metal scene is not for the faint of heart. Bands often write about Satanism and the occult, vocalists try to sound as evil as possible, and things can get bloody intense when dozens of young Nordic headbangers decide to form a mosh pit at a live concert. Notice the use of the word "dozens" as opposed to thousands; while many mainstream rockers can easily sell out huge soccer stadiums, most Scandinavian death metal bands are so harsh and brutally punishing that they will never even come close to mainstream acceptance (which is just as well because many of them treasure their underground outsider status). Nonetheless, some Nordic death metal bands are more merciful than others, and Where ...
| | Silkhorn Musician In Mantua CD (2006)
Dirty Woman music CDs
$13.15 The first time he heard John Coltrane on the radio (1961) in New York City, Silkhorn heard a passion and a cry in the tenor saxophone tone that seemed to speak from somewhere deep inside a place that must be where the soul resides. Not only was the sound of the horn impossible to ignore but the cascade of improvised melody was unlike anything imagineable. So much power and such a blizzard of complexity and hard driving rhythmn that it totally captured his heart. Now flashback ten years to 1951 in Bayonne,N.J. Silkhorn’s first teacher has taken him to a small music store to help him pick out his first saxophone. A magical man named Charlie Oliver(the teacher) ....he spoke very little but taught by illustration. He turned on the radio in the store and tuned in to the song “Moonlight in Vermont” and picked up the horn he had selected and began playing improvised melody to join the music on the radio. Silkhorn was mesmerized by this and became enamored for life about the act of making up music on the spot from the imagination. He never had a chance to learn how to do this before his family moved to Linden,N.J. in 1955. The idea of becoming a musician was frowned on by his depression era parents who wanted him to go to college to become an engineer, so music became a hobby. His first year at Rutgers Engineering was a bust ( he was accused of cheating on his calculus exam for getting the highest grade-- he did not cheat--and flunked out and was expelled ) Riddled with shame ,he left his home amd moved into Manhattan and became a beatnik of sorts ,living in Greenwich Village. His roomate was a filmmaker and Silkhorn became a very prodigious drinker. One of the bars was on W.10th St. called Julius. He befriended an upcoming actor who was super in a building in the East Village. This is now 1961 and Silkhorn had discovered Coltrane and became obsessed with the man. Turns out there was a vacancy in this building and a bass player named Reggie Workman lived there and was a member of Coltrane’s band. The band rehearsed there at times and Silkhorn stayed home for a week to listen to the great tenor man rehearse. And so it happened and Silkhorn was in total awe of John Coltrane and the way he played. Once he was practicing in his apartment above Workman’s and he woke somebody up(he banged on the ceiling and told Silkhorn to practice later.) When Silkhorn came home that night there was a note stuck in his door with a diagram on how to build a baffled box out of cardboard to muffle the sound while practicing. And this advice: “ anything ...
| | Jones, Jeff & The Earthtones Sing A Little Song Do A Little Dance CD (2008)
Dirty Woman songs
$14.79
| | Tubie Pushe'E Blue With Envy CD (2009)
Dirty Woman album
$14.79
| | Jimmy Mcintosh New Orleans To London CD (2009) Digipak
Dirty Woman CD music
$13.05
| | SLMJM State Of California vs. CD (2009)
Dirty Woman music CDs
$13.15
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