| | Joe Satriani Surfing With The Alien CD Joe Satriani Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Joe Satriani (guitar, keyboards, bass, percussion, drum programming); Jeff Campbell (drums, percussion); Bongo Bob Smith (percussion, drum programming); John Cuniberti (percussion). Recorded at Alpha And Omega Recording and Hyde Street Studios, San Francisco, California. Includes liner notes by Matt Resnicoff. Personnel: Joe Satriani (vocals, guitar, keyboards, percussion, programming, drum programming); Joe Satriani (bass guitar); Stuart Hamm (bass guitar); Bob Smith (drums, bongos, percussion, programming, drum programming); Jonathan Mover (drums); Jeff Kreeger (programming); Jeff Campitelli (drums, percussion); Bongo Bob Smith (percussion, drum programming); John Cuniberti (percussion). Liner Note Author: Matt Resnicoff. Recording information: Alpha And Omega Recording; Alpha And Omega Studios, And Hyde Street Studios, San F; Hyde Street Studios, San Francisco, CA. Photographers: Joe Satriani; John Cuniberti; Flip Holahan; Neil Zlozower. Unknown Contributor Role: Joe Satriani. Arranger: Joe Satriani. The LED ZEPPELIN IV of instrumental rock albums, 1987's SURFING WITH THE ALIEN cemented Joe Satriani's status as a top-tier virtuoso axe man. Although Satriani (a teacher to such famous students as Steve Vai and Metallica's Kirk Hammett) began getting recognition following his solo debut, NOT OF THIS EARTH, it was this subsequent record that truly sent the guitarist's career into the stratosphere. With the majority of the album performed by Satch himself (including bass, keyboard, and most drum parts), this is an outing that prominently displays his overall musical talent, while keeping the focus on his amazingly deft, blistering leads. The New York-born guitarist also impresses with his eclectic array of styles, ranging from the fierce hard rock of the title track to the delicate pop of "Always with Me, Always with You" to the bold blues of "Satch Boogie." For those curious about the revered shredder, this is a great introduction, and, for aspiring heavy-metal/hard-rock guitarists, SURFING WITH THE ALIEN is absolutely essential. Surfing with the Alien belongs to its era like Are You Experienced? belongs to its own -- perhaps it doesn't transcend its time the way the Jimi Hendrix Experience's 1967 debut does, but Joe Satriani's 1987 breakthrough can be seen as the gold standard for guitar playing of the mid- to late '80s, an album that captures everything that was good about the glory days of shred. Certainly, Satriani was unique among his peers in that his playing was so fluid that his technical skills never seemed like showboating -- something that was somewhat true of his 1986 debut, Not of This Earth, but on Surfing with the Alien he married this dexterity to a true sense of melodic songcraft, a gift that helped him be that rare thing: a guitar virtuoso who ordinary listeners enjoyed. Nowhere is this more true than on "Always with Me, Always with You," a genuine ballad -- not beefed up with muscular power chords but rather sighing gently with its melody -- but this knack was also evident on the ZZ Top homage "Satch Boogie" and the title track itself, both of which turned into rock radio hits. This melodic facility, plus his fondness for a good old-fashioned three-chord rock, separated Satriani from his shredding peers in 1987, many of whom were quite literally his students. But he was no throwback: he equaled his former students Steve Vai and Kirk Hammett in sweep picking and fretboard acrobatics and he had a sparkling, spacy quality to some of his songs -- particularly the closing stretch of the Middle Eastern-flavored "Lords of Karma," the twinkling "Midnight," and "Echo" -- that was thoroughly modern for 1987. The production of Surfing with the Alien is also thoroughly of its year -- stiff drumbeats, sparkling productions -- so much so that it can seem a bit like a relic from another era, but it's fine that it doesn't transcend its time: it captures the best of its era and is still iStereophile (2/93, p.125) - "...some of the greatest power-rock ever recorded on planet earth..." Surfing With The Alien Music | List Price | $7.99 (You save $0.40) | | Category | Rock Albums, Instrumental CDs, Rock/Pop, Guitar | | Label | Epic | | Orig Year | 1987 | | All Time Sales Rank | 2832  | | CD Universe Part number | 1140703 | | Catalog number | 63701 | | Discs | 2 | | Release Date | Aug 03, 1999 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Joe Satriani; John Cuniberti | | Engineer | John Cuniberti | | Recording Time | 37 minutes | | Personnel | Joe Satriani - guitar, keyboards, bass guitar, percussion, drum programming Jeff Campitelli John Cuniberti - percussion Stuart "Stu" Hamm - bass guitar Bongo Bob Smith - percussion, drum programming Jonathan Mover - drums Jeff Campbell - drums, percussion Jeff Kreeger - programming
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Joe Satriani Surfing With The Alien Songs Surfing With The Alien Music Surfing With The Alien Music Review Buy Surfing With The Alien CD Purchase Surfing With The Alien CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Joe Satriani Crystal Planet CD (1998)
Surfing With The Alien
$6.75 Personnel: Joe Satriani (guitar, harmonica, keyboards, guitar synthesizer, bass, hand claps); Eric Cadieux (keyboards, programming); Stuart Hamm (bass); Eric Valentine, Jeff Campitelli (drums, percussion, hand claps); Rhoades Howe, Elk Thunder (percussion); Mike Manning, Mike Fraser (hand claps). "A Train Of Angels" was nominated for the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance. Personnel: ...
| | Joe Satriani Flying In A Blue Dream CD (1989)
Surfing With The Alien
$7.59 Personnel includes: Joe Satriani (guitar); Stuart Hamm (bass); Simon Phillips, ...
| | Dream Theater Scenes From A Memory CD (1999)
Surfing With The Alien
$11.35 Live Recording
Dream Theater: James LaBrie (vocals); John Petrucci (guitar, background vocals); Jordan Rudess (keyboards); John Myung (bass); Mike Portnoy (drums, percussion, background vocals). Additional personnel: Theresa Thomason (vocals); Mary Canty, Shelia Slappy, Mary Smith, Jeanette Smith, Clarence Burke Jr., Carol Cyrus, Dale Scott (background vocals). Producers: Mike Portnoy, John Petrucci, Terry Brown. Engineers: Doug Oberkircher, Terry Brown. Recorded at Little Bear Studios, Suffern, New York and Metal ...
| | Dream Theater Awake CD (1994)
Surfing With The Alien
$10.39 Dream Theater: James LaBrie (vocals), John Petrucci (guitar), Kevin Moore (keyboards), John Myung (bass), Mike Portnoy (drums, percussion). Recorded at One ...
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Surfing With The Alien
$16.05 
| | Joe Satriani Extremist CD (1992)
Surfing With The Alien
$7.59
| | Golden Voices From The Silver Screen Vol. 1 CD (2000) (Import) United Kingdom
Surfing With The Alien
$16.99
| | Chara Sweet CD (2004)
Surfing With The Alien
$39.59
| | Blind Faith (CD In LP Sleeve) CD (1969) (Import) Japan; Mini LP Sleeve; CD In LP Sleeve
Surfing With The Alien
$33.49 Limited edition Japanese pressing of the 1969 album comes packaged in an LP sleeve. Polydor. 2005.
Blind Faith: Steve Winwood (vocals, guitar, piano, organ, bass); Eric Clapton (vocals, guitar); Rick Grech (violin, bass); Ginger Baker (drums, percussion). Producer: Jimmy Miller. Reissue producer: Bill Levenson. Engineers include: Andy Johns, Alan O'Duffy, Keith Harwood. Recorded at Olympic & Morgan Studios, London, England between February & June, 1969. Originally released on Atco (33-304)/Polydor (583 059). Blind Faith's first and last album, more than 30 years old and counting, remains one of the jewels of the Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, and Ginger Baker catalogs, despite the crash-and-burn history of the band itself, which scarcely lasted six months. As much a follow-up to Traffic's self-titled second album as it is to Cream's final output, it merges the soulful blues of the former with the heavy riffing and outsized song lengths of the latter for a very compelling sound unique to this band. Not all of it works -- between the virtuoso electric blues of "Had to Cry Today," the acoustic-textured "Can't Find My Way Home," the soaring "Presence of the Lord" (Eric Clapton's one contribution here as a songwriter, and the first great song he ever authored) and "Sea of Joy," the band doesn't do much with the Buddy Holly song "Well All Right"; and Ginger Baker's "Do What You Like" was a little weak to take up 15 minutes of space on an LP that might have been better used for a shorter drum solo and more songs. Unfortunately, the group was never that together ...
| | Women Of Egypt 1924-31: Pioneers Of Stardom And Fame CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Surfing With The Alien
$14.55 In a period of a great cultural awakening in Egypt, this is a showcase for an almost forgotten era with women singers being the biggest "stars" who were as famous as any star of today (including Umm Kulthum). While scarcely remembered now, the competitio
Personnel: Rose Zahran (piano). An artistic renaissance overtook Egypt in the 1920s and '30s, an explosion of new theaters and cabarets resulting in something of a golden age for female Egyptian vocalists. Suddenly in demand, and finding outlets unavailable to them previously, female actors and singers ...
| | Gong Leave It Open CD (2006) (Import) Japan; 24 Bit Remastered; Mini LP Sleeve
Surfing With The Alien
$36.59
| | Sandy & Junior Era Uma Vez: Ao Vivo CD (1998)
$22.35 | | Eric Wuest Violin Covers CD (2009)
Surfing With The Alien
$14.79
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