Buy Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals CD
 | | Les Paul
36 x 48 inch Limited Edition on Canvas
Price: $994.99 |  | | Les Paul
16 x 21 inch Limited Edition on Canvas
Price: $394.99 |
Purchase Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals CD
To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ella Fitzgerald Ella In Hollywood CDs (1961) Remastered; Box Set
Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals album
$63.49 Originally released on Verve Records in 1961, ELLA IN HOLLYWOOD is a straightforward ...
| | Herb Alpert What Now My Love CD (1966) Remastered; Special Edition
Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals CD music
$9.99 With this album, Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass settle into their hitmaking groove, the once strikingly eclectic elements of Dixieland, pop, rock, and mariachi becoming more smoothly integrated within Alpert's infectious "Ameriachi" blend. They sound more like a band now; along with Alpert's now-indelibly stamped trumpet sound, we can recognize jazzman John Pisano's ...
| | Night Of Blistering Blues DVDs (1987)
Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals music CDs
$17.09
| | Dino: The Essential Dean Martin CD (2004)
Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals songs
$10.45 Nearly a decade after Dean Martin's death, the crooner's fans were finally given the definitive Dino collection. While ...
| | Three Tenors DVD (1990)
Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals album
$23.05
| | Steve Tyrell This Time Of The Year CD (2002)
Inventor: Great Guitar Instrumentals CD music
$6.09 Steve Tyrell has attracted enough attention for his two regular albums, A New Standard and Standard Time, that he is almost beyond journalists' usual tack of describing a new singer's voice by who he sounds like; pretty soon, they'll be saying that other singers sound like him. But it remains true that if you have never heard him but you are familiar with Dr. John, your first reaction upon hearing him is likely to be that you are listening to Dr. John. Well, maybe a younger Dr. John, and one whose accent isn't quite as swampy. But the basic elements -- the grit and gravel in the tone, the slurred, deep South phrasing -- are much the same. Of course, Tyrell comes by the sound of his voice honestly, hailing from Houston, TX, and boasting a musical career (albeit, behind the scenes) as long as Dr. John's. But it remains true that Dr. John got there first, and so the comparison remains inevitable. As on his regular albums, Tyrell lines up a cast of jazz heavyweights for these small-group sessions, allowing plenty of space for soloing, particularly by trumpeter Clark Terry, who shines on "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" and "The Christmas Song." Tyrell is at his best on the bluesier numbers, especially ...
|
|