| | Keith Urban CD Keith Urban Discography of CDs
(6 Customer Reviews)
"Rollercoaster" was nominated for the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance.
This rereleased version of the Australian country artist's 1991 debut features 15 tracks, including "Only You."
Keith Urban is Australian, but listening to his debut self-titled solo CD, you'd swear he was raised somewhere south of the Mason-Dixon line. Just as the Beatles mimicked the American accents of their musical heroes, Urban, the former leader of the group the Ranch, adopts the twang of the country stars he heard growing up Down Under. Urban's brand of country includes soulful vocals; a nice mix of acoustic and steel guitars, banjo, fiddles, and mandolins; and some fine songwriting, from Urban, Steve Wariner, and even two former members of the Go-Gos's (!) The subject here, with few exceptions, is love in all its aspects, from the hooky opening cut, "It's a Love Thing," to the gorgeous ballad "Your Everything," to the Cajun stomp of "I Wanna Be Your Man (Forever)." Urban's excellent guitar playing throughout the CD is tasteful and understated, but adds immeasurably to the arrangements. When he really cuts loose, on the instrumental "Rollercoaster," you can hear why acts like the Dixie Chicks and Garth Brooks tapped him to play on their CDs. Overall, KEITH URBAN offers a taste of what this talented singer, songwriter, and guitarist might do in the future.
Aussie edition of the New Zealand country artist's 1997 album. 15 tracks including three bonus tracks, 'The River', 'What Love Is That Way' & 'I Never Work On A Sunday'.
Principally recorded at Javelina Recording Studios, Nashville, Tennessee.
Personnel: Keith Urban (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars, electric sitar, ganjo); Steve Wariner (acoustic & electric guitars, background vocals); Biff Watson (acoustic guitar); Bruce Bouton (steel guitar, dobro); Paul Franklin, (steel guitar); Aubrey Haynie (fiddle, mandolin); Steve Conn (accordion); Matt Rollings (piano, organ, synthesizer, background vocals); Glenn Worf (bass); Chris McHugh (drums, drum loops, percussion); Kim Keyes, Jerry Flowers, Tabitha Fair, Emily Robison, Martie Seidel, Curtis Young (background vocals); The Love Strings.
Keith Urban Music | List Price | $19.98 (You save $5.09) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Country CDs, Contemporary Country | | Label | EMI Music Distribution | | Orig Year | 1999 | | All Time Sales Rank | 20087  | | CD Universe Part number | 1474183 | | Catalog number | 857484 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Jan 04, 2005 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Personnel | Paul Franklin Glenn Worf - bass Aubrey Haynie - fiddle, mandolin Matt Rollings - piano, organ, synthesizer, background vocals Biff Watson - acoustic guitar Chris McHugh - drums, drum loops, percussion Bruce C. Bouton - steel guitar, dobro Curtis Young - background vocals Steve Wariner - acoustic & electric guitars, background vocals Keith Urban - vocals, acoustic & electric guitars, electric sitar, ganjo
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Keith Urban Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews keith urban 1991 the 1991 keith urban, i thought, was a great beginning. his style obviously is much different now but you can hear the real talent in this compilation of early songs. Submitted by ewgardn (essex junction, Vermont)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Loved It well i really love this cd and i have his other ones and his videos dvd and finnally getting this one my collection is compleated will untill he makes another album Submitted by chevelle_gal_okc (Oklahoma City ,OK ,USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Don't miss anything from Keith Urban The first CD I bought of Keith Urban's was his latest "Golden Road" I hadn't really heard anything from him before but I new I liked the song "Somebody like you" Well, to make a long story short THAT CD was great beyond my wildest dreams so I went back in time and started buying his earlier stuff. The "Keith Urban" 1991 from Australia being the last one that I bought. It is equally as great as "Golden Road" and his first album in the US entitled "Keith Urban". In my opinion, this man has never produced a bad song!! You get your money's worth when you buy his CDs because all the songs are good enough to be hit singles!! You will not be dissapointed in any of his music he is an extremely talented artist who sings, writes, produces and plays guitar like nothing I have ever witnessed. Submitted by a reviewer (Huntsville, AL)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Keith Urban = SUPER STAR MUSIC All of Keith's music is great. He is a great talent,excellent guitarist,great voice and a very talented song writer. What more can I say, other than aussome. Do not miss out on this album. It is a must have for your collection. I love playing this cd for hours. A Keith Urban Fan Club member. This cd will not disapoint you. It's great. Hard to pick a favorite song, their all so good. He has never written a bad song. Check out all his cd's. There excellent! Submitted by Carol (Concord,NH,USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Don't miss out Keith in his early years. A wonderful collection of charmingly innocent tracks that'll keep you hooked from the first song to the last. Submitted by babydollcountrygirl (BC Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Keith Urban CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Lynyrd Skynyrd Gimme Back My Bullets CD (1976) Remastered
Keith Urban album
$6.55 Studio tracks recorded at Capricorn Studios, Macon, Georgia and Record Plant, Los Angeles, California in 1975. Live tracks recorded at Bill Graham's Winterland, San Francisco, California on March 7, 1976. Includes liner notes by Ron O'Brien.
Digitally remastered by Doug Schwartz (Audio Mechanics, Los Angeles, California).
Perhaps Lynyrd Skynyrd's most underrated album, 1976's GIMME BACK MY BULLETS was another inspired and consistent set from one of Southern rock's founding fathers. Like its predecessor, NUTHIN' FANCY, Skynyrd's fourth release didn't produce a hit single like its first couple of albums had, but there were several songs that subsequently became standards for the band. Highlights include the album-opening title track, which captures Skynyrd at their toughest, powered on by muscular guitar riffing courtesy of Gary Rossington and the late Allen Collins, as well as "Searching," the latter being included later in the year on ONE MORE FROM THE ROAD.
Additional personnel includes: Barry Harwood (dobro, mandolin); Lee Freeman (harmonica); The Honnicutts (background vocals).
Producer: Tom Dowd.
Reissue producer: Ron O'Brien.
Personnel: Ronnie Van Zant (vocals); Gary Rossington (guitar, acoustic guitar, slide guitar); Allen Collins (guitar); Barry Harwood (dobro, mandolin); ...
| | Lynyrd Skynyrd Nuthin' Fancy CD (1975) Remastered
Keith Urban CD music
$6.59 Digitally remastered by Doug Schwartz (Audio Mechanics, Los Angeles, California).
Besides being a touring warhorse, Lynyrd Skynyrd cranked out albums at a brisk rate during its original lineup's brief recording career, averaging at least one new release per year. 1975 saw the emergence of Skynyrd's third album in as many years, NUTHIN' FANCY.
While the album didn't contain a smash hit single as had its predecessors ("Free Bird," "Sweet Home Alabama," etc.), it proved to be another solid collection of tough Southern rock. "Saturday Night Special" remains one of the band's fiercest rockers, while such other compositions as "On the Hunt" and "Whiskey Rock-A-Roller" have become Skynyrd standards as well.
Recorded at WEBB IV Studios, Atlanta, in January 1975 and Studio One, Doraville, Georgia in August 1974. Bonus live tracks recorded at Bill Graham's Winterland, San Francisco, ...
| | Keith Urban Golden Road CD (2002)
Keith Urban music CDs
$9.59 Considering that Keith Urban grew up in New Zealand and cultivates an image that's more Kelly Clarkson than Roy Clark, one might be tempted to doubt his abilities when it comes to Nashville hit making. On GOLDEN ROAD, however, Urban delivers a solid set of contemporary country with more panache and chops than many of his American-born, cowboy-hatted contemporaries. A virtuoso picker who credits Lindsay Buckingham as a primary influence, Urban has fashioned a highly melodic country/alternative-rock fusion that's equal parts Fleetwood Mac, Rodney Crowell, and Third Eye Blind. On several tunes, twangy vocals and banjo blend seamlessly with distorted Lynyrd Skynryd-style guitar leads and the pounding drums of rocker Matt Chamberlain (David Bowie, Tori Amos, Dave Navarro). In addition, Urban wisely avoids using Music City cookie-cutter material, instead favoring mature tunes from left-of-center stalwarts such as Crowell and Radney Foster. Overall, GOLDEN ROAD offers few real surprises, but serves as a welcome reminder of Nashville's occasional ability to produce music that's simultaneously slick and substantial.
Feat. Single "Somebody Like You"
Audio Mixer: Justin Niebank.
Recording information: Blueberry Hill; Emerald Entertainment; Hound's Ear; The Sound Kitchen, Nashville, TN.
Photographer: Juan Pont Lezica.
Arranger: ...
| | Keith Urban In The Ranch CD (1997) Enhanced CD
Keith Urban songs
$9.99 Technically, the Ranch is a country music trio consisting of Peter Clarke, Jerry Flowers, and Keith Urban, but in practice, it is a group of equals to about the extent that the Jimi Hendrix Experience was, which is to say, not at all. Clarke provides drums and percussion, Flowers plays bass and sings background vocals, and Urban does everything else. That means singing lead and background vocals and playing a variety of stringed instruments and keyboards, as well as taking co-writing credits on nine of the 12 tracks. The album is a showcase for Urban, the up-and-coming Down Under performer who moved to Nashville to be nearer the music he loved. Urban is a triple threat: he writes songs steeped in country traditions (yet not really traditionalist), he sings them with confidence, and, most impressively, picks a guitar authoritatively. His pop/country/rock sound occasionally recalls the 1980s style of Rodney Crowell, particularly on one of the songs he didn't write, "Just Some Love." His is an approach that takes the history of country into consideration, but looks forward. He may plead "Hank Don't Fail Me Now" in one song title, but he never really sounds like Hank Williams. He is perhaps most comfortable just picking fast, as he does on the instrumental "Clutterbilly," but the album reveals a budding talent ...
| | Keith Urban Be Here CD (2004)
Keith Urban album
$9.59 With his US debut album, GOLDEN ROAD, Keith Urban confounded critics' expectations of what a New Zealand-born country singer could do, delivering a record that not only contained four Number One hits and remained on the charts for more than 100 weeks, but was an undeniably substantial artistic achievement. Urban cites legendary songwriter Jimmy Webb (author of Glen Campbell's "Wichita Lineman" and "Galveston"), as an influence, and Urban's music often recalls not only Nashville mavericks Rodney Crowell, Vince Gill, and Radney Foster, but the introspective stylings of 1970s singer/songwriters Jackson Browne and Dan Fogelberg. That said, BE HERE's smooth California folk-rock feel doesn't obscure the album's firm country roots. "God's Been Good to Me" lays down a tough, Waylon Jennings-worthy beat bolstered by hot banjo picking, while "Live to Love Another Day" is all backwoods twang and rural imagery. Urban's ...
| | Darn That Dream CD (2000)
Keith Urban CD music
$23.39
| | Muki Album CD (2000) Import
Keith Urban music CDs
$23.29
| | Elephant Man Log On CD (2001) (Import) United Kingdom
Keith Urban songs
$15.09 The hair, the hair, the hair. The one thing known for sure about Elephant Man is that his hair is totally wild. That's what makes him the "Punk Rock of Dancehall" aka "The Energy Man" aka "the Bahamanian Syd Barrett." Now that Elephant Man's branding is finished, it's time to get to the music. Log On is his second full-length release and was a huge smash in Jamaica, spawning five charting tracks. Over the course of 22 tracks, Elephant Man demonstrates his considered dancehall skills. This guy is no amateur, and pulling off an epic-length album like this takes skills. Quite rightfully, these skills have made him a staple of crates around the world. On one of the better tracks, "Bring the War" (set to the tune of Missy Elliott's "Get Your Freak On"), Elephant Man breaks off a fine rhyme: "I know you hate me now/The girls that date me now/The girls they waiting and want to come and rape me now/It's getting feverish now/They can't believe us now/The war is on and none of dem can defeat us now." On "The Bombing," he demonstrates his range, pulling off a paranoid paean to the WTC attacks. Other critics have written negatively about the preponderance of "war" songs on this record, of which there are roughly eight or so. It seems, however, that his best tracks are the war tracks. While he doesn't have the pointed social crit skills of a Lee "Scratch" Perry, it's on these tracks that he's trying to hone them. (They do need honing.) Overall, the album doesn't break any new ground, but it's a respectable entry -- more consequential for its massive popularity than its merit. At this point, he's too concerned with commercial success to produce an album ...
| | Lorrie Morgan All American Country CD (2003)
Keith Urban album
$6.59
| | Essential Roy Orbison CDs (2006) Remastered
Keith Urban CD music
$15.95 Roy Orbison has been in such need of a comprehensive, career-spanning compilation like Legacy's 2006 double-disc The Essential Roy Orbison that it's especially frustrating that it falls short of the mark. Not counting Bear Family's exhaustive 2001 set, which gathered everything Roy recorded between 1955 and 1965, including alternate takes, it is the first multi-disc Orbison compilation since 1988's four-disc box The Legendary Roy Orbison, which was released in the midst of his remarkable comeback that peaked the following year with the posthumous comeback Mystery Girl, which arrived too late to be part of Legendary. So, Orbison's catalog truly was missing a set that spanned from "Ooby Dooby," his first hit for Sun in 1956, all the way to his last charting single, 1992's "I Drove All Night." Essential attempts to do that, touching on every phase of his career -- the early rockabilly for Sun in the '50s, his cinematic hits for Monument in the early '60s, the cult classics for MGM in the late '60s, his '80s comeback -- over the course of 40 tracks. It gets a lot right, particularly on the first disc, which has most of the big hits from "Ooby Dooby" to 1964's "Oh, Pretty Woman," all presented in chronological order. Where things start to go wrong is on the second disc, where the comp suddenly abandons all pretense at chronological order, opening up with four cuts from Mystery Girl (including the hits "You Got It" and "She's a Mystery to Me"), before doubling back to the '60s for five MGM singles -- "Ride Away," "Crawling Back," "Best Friend," "Communication Breakdown," and "Walk On" -- then proceeding to the '80s, first with the Emmylou Harris duet "That Lovin' You Feeling Again" from the Roadie soundtrack, and then with re-recordings of "Running Scared" and "In Dreams," two '60s masterworks that are only available here in these solid but inferior remakes. The jumbled chronology results in a bit of a disconcerting listen, since the production styles don't comfortably sit together, but that would be easier to forgive if "Running Scared" and "In Dreams" were present in their original versions; without them, Essential isn't quite the concise, comprehensive collection it aspires to be. It's a major flaw, but not necessarily a fatal one, since the remainder of the set does offer his biggest ...
| | Tim Van Eyken Stiffs Lovers Holymen Thieves CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Keith Urban music CDs
$14.55 One of the most outstanding musicians of the new British folk generation and a long standing member of Waterson:Carthy, English traditional music's best loved band, Tim Van Eyken has been honing his craft and preparing himself for this moment. Collecting
Stepping out from his usual sideman role, Tim Van Eyken shows himself to be an excellent frontman on this solo disc. There's a lot of confidence here, evidenced by kicking off with "Barleycorn," a version of one of the best-known songs given a fresh, original, and quite catchy arrangement before heading out from there. As he'd proved before, he's a very tidy box player, and he uses stalwart backing here, although perhaps the biggest revelation is his singing. It's not obtrusive, but certainly quite persuasive, especially on "Fair Ellen of Ratcliffe," an epic and gruesome tale that stands as the disc's centerpiece before haring off into some modern and quite effective folk-rock. Good as this album is overall, not everything works. "Babes in the Wood" suffers from an arrangement that's ...
| | Leora Cashe Inspiration CD (2005)
Keith Urban songs
$20.49 "...simply put, Cashe is one of Canada's finest singers"-David Dawes, BC Christian News "...soaring vocal prowess!"David Lennam, Victoria News "...jazz and gospel singer Leora Cashe is definitely genuine! ...Cashe has the pipes to deliver the goods."-Fiona Hughes, ...
| | June Taylor Honker, The Mixed Up Mother Goose CD (2005)
Keith Urban album
$16.45 June Taylor as narrator, tells the story of Honker -The Mixed-Up Mother Goose . Honker was hatched on a ranch with the chickens and she thinks she is their mother. The chickens think so too. But chickens can't fly. Everyone on the ranch felt sorry for Honker and thought she needed a mate. Grand Dandy ...
| | Broken Doll Star Filled Night Sky CD (2007) (Import)
Keith Urban CD music
$27.59
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