| | Keith Whitley Greatest Hits CD Keith Whitley Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Includes liner notes by Garth Fundis and Edward Morris.
Producers include: Garth Fundis, Keith Whitley, Blake Mevis. Keith Whitley Greatest Hits Songs Greatest Hits Music Review Purchase Greatest Hits CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ralph Stanley Back To The Cross CD (1994)
Greatest Hits album
$12.65
| | Very Best Of Randy Travis CD (2004)
Greatest Hits CD music
$12.95 Randy Travis emerged in the 1980s at the forefront of country's New Traditionalist movement, with a sound that recalled classic country balladeers George Jones, Merle Haggard, and Lefty Frizzell. His pure, honest approach to heart-wrenching saloon songs resonated with country audiences in a major ...
| | Very Best Of Dwight Yoakam CD (2004)
Greatest Hits music CDs
$15.59 It's no coincidence that ...
| | Palace Music Arise Therefore CD (1996)
Greatest Hits songs
$12.75
| | Talking Heads True Stories CD (1986)
Greatest Hits album
$6.39
| | Country Gospel Favorites CD (2004)
Greatest Hits CD music
$7.29
| | Christine Lavin Bellevue Years CD (2000)
Greatest Hits music CDs
$13.79
| | Jimmie Davis I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now CDs (2001) (Import)
Greatest Hits songs
$16.95
| | Eddi Reader Live: London, U.K. 06.05.03 CDs (2003)
Greatest Hits album
$15.95
| | Barry Manilow Greatest Songs Of The Fifties CD (2006) DualDisc
Greatest Hits CD music
$17.49 This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other.
A significant album for Barry Manilow, THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE FIFTIES finds the Brooklyn-born crooner taking on tunes that were popular in his youth. This 2006 outing also marks Manilow's return to his former label, Arista, with the company's founder, Clive Davis, setting the singer up with 1950s pop classics ...
| | Andy's Automatics Things Have Changed CD (2005)
Greatest Hits music CDs
$17.75 It's a genre that's been described in many ways. Some call it traditional country, some call it hillbilly and grassroots country, and some call it alternative country or Americana. We call it a pure, unadulterated original blend of smooth-groove honky-tonk, rockabilly, and REAL country music. But after hearing standards by Johnny Cash and Hank Williams, as well as current artists like BR549, The Derailers, The Bottle Rockets, and Cigar Store Indians, you may have to put your own label on Andy's Automatics, especially after hearing their solid interpretations. But despite performing exciting versions of their favorite artists, the main focus ...
| | Soundtrack Pending The Miracle CD (Import)
$13.15 | | Pat Kinsella Clear Blue Cemetery Sky? CD (2008)
Greatest Hits songs
$10.25 On this project Pat Kinsella plays electric and acoustic guitars, resonator, guitar synthesizer, fretless bass, digital piano, djembe, clay madal, bhangra dhol and darbuka.Two-thirds of the way through completing this project, in 2005, he suffered a SubArachnoid (brain) Hemorrhage. While rehabilitating at home after being released from the hospital, he recorded 'LifeFlight' (named for the critical care helicopter which flew him to the Neurosurgery ICU when he had the hemorrhage). Then shortly afterwards he wrote and recorded 'Out Of The Blue (for Lynne)' for his new love (who is now his wife).The writing and recording for this project was completed in mid-2005, but it was not released until 2008. When asked why there was this gap, Pat says "I felt that i wanted to add SOMETHING more, but wasn't sure what. But in early 2008 I started focusing on my bass playing and formally working on some of the technique things i had never learned. So along the way i started thinking that whatever I did in the future was probably going to go in a pretty different direction than 'Clear Blue Cemetery Sky?' was already going." Pat says "For me, tying off the end of a project is not some "voila" kind of thing. I never really feel that something is perfect as it is and that there is nothing left to be done. I just decide something is complete because I have exhausted my reserve of relevant things to add. And when I get to that point, where anything more I add or do is just going to just add more mass without enhancing the quality of what i'm trying to get across, then to me it's time to wrap it up and finalize that project." So in early 2008 he determined that 'Clear Blue Cemetery Sky?' would stand as is, and he mastered it (basically only changing a few fade-outs and normalizing what was completed in 2005).Regarding the title, Pat says he thought of the title 'Clear Blue Cemetery Sky?' in late 2005 when contemplating the imagery in the poem 'Les Corbeaux' by Arthur Rimbaud. He says "I've always found cemeteries to be very peaceful and contemplative places, particularly on a nice cool clear autumn day. So this is the sort of environment i was reminded of when I read 'Les Corbeaux' by Rimbaud; and the title 'Clear Blue Cemetery Sky' just came to me very spontaneously. So i originally started out calling it 'Clear Blue Cemetery Sky'(with no question mark), but then between 2005 and 2008, as time elapsed and new experiences occurred, what started out as a simple feeling i was trying to summarize in that title began to change into something more complex, and i suppose more reality-based. So now the title is 'Clear Blue Cemetery Sky?' It may seem like a tiny thing, but to me that question mark denotes the concept of "IS everything going to be all rosy?". It begins calling a lot of ...
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