| | Jon Pousette-Dart Heart & Soul CD Jon Pousette-Dart Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Live Recording
Personnel: Jon Pousette-Dart; Tim Gearan (guitar); Jim Chapdelaine (mandocello, keyboards); Chuck Chaplin, Bruce Bears (keyboards); Rob Fried (percussion); John Curtis (vocals, guitar); Toni Lynn Washington, John Troy (vocals); Billy Ward (drums, percussion); Eric Parker.
Recording information: Bedroom Productions; Blue Jay Studio; Club 39.
Dirty Linen (p.92) - "[It] revives the harmonious sounds of his earliest work." Jon Pousette-Dart Heart & Soul Songs | 1. | After the Rain |
| 2. | Can't Keep a Good Man Down |
| 3. | Way to Be With You |
| 4. | In the Pocket |
| 5. | Heart & Soul |
| 6. | My Suv |
| 7. | Creole Wind |
| 8. | Blindman |
| 9. | Under the Spell of You |
| 10. | Perfect World |
| 11. | Heavenly Body |
| 12. | Morning Song |
| 13. | Shake M |
| 14. | Happy Trails |
| Heart & Soul Music Review Purchase Heart & Soul CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Rosanne Cash Rules Of Travel CD (2003)
Heart & Soul
$11.29 RULES OF TRAVEL was nominated for the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album.
Rosanne Cash started out at the vanguard of progressive country in the late '70s, but although you can't have deeper roots in country music than Johnny Cash's eldest child, she always had a broader vision in mind. Her definitive farewell to country came with 1993's THE WHEEL and she hasn't looked back since. Only one more album popped out in the 10 years between that career milestone and RULES OF TRAVEL, but it sounds like it was time well spent.
With country ever further behind her, Cash goes down a deep, dark, introspective singer/songwriter path via dusky songs simmering with hurt, regret, and hard lessons learned. Cash's artful-but-not-pretentious lyrics are ...
| | New Riders Of The Purple Sage CD (1971) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Heart & Soul
$7.49 New Riders of the Purple Sage: Dave Torbert (bass instrument, background vocals); David Nelson, John Dawson.
In the early 1970s, with the likes of the Band, the Grateful Dead, and Crosby, Stills & Nash all turning away from the orgy of the senses that was the '60s, toward a simpler, more deeply rooted place, country rock became de rigeur. Shortly after the Dead made their move from acid tests to hoedowns, their pals Dave Torbert and John "Marmaduke" Dawson followed suit. Torbert and Dawson were the heart of New Riders of the Purple Sage, aided on their debut album by Dead buddies Jerry Garcia and Mickey Hart. There's a still-slightly-stoned, morning-after feel here that works well with the New Riders' low-key style. Their cowboy/hippie/outlaw ethic is espoused on the likes of "Last Lonely Eagle" and "Glendale Train" as horse trails meet Haight-Ashbury in an agreeably ramshackle manner.
Anyone who enjoyed the Grateful Dead's Workingman's Dead or American Beauty and wanted more, ...
| | American Flyer/Spirit Of A Women CD (2004)
Heart & Soul
$13.59 Originally released on United Artists. Includes liner notes by Richie Unterberger.
American Flyer has long been a favorite of singer/songwriter, L.A. country-rock, and '70s soft rock aficionados, partially because of the group's supergroup status, but chiefly because the music they made was very, very good. That pedigree was indeed impressive, with the four members consisting of former Pure Prairie League member Craig Fuller, Eric Kaz of the Blues Magoos, Doug Yule of the Velvet Underground, and Steve Katz, formerly of Blood, Sweat & Tears -- maybe not Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young in terms of marquee name recognition, but surely a collection of gifted and respected singer/songwriters who complemented each other nicely. While they had some modest success with their George Martin-produced 1976 eponymous debut, they had a difficult ...
| | Marshall Tucker Band Searchin' For A Rainbow CD (1975) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Heart & Soul
$10.69 With Searchin' for a Rainbow, The Marshall Tucker Band retreats somewhat from the grittier sounds of Where We All Belong without abandoning their country and blues roots. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
With Searchin' for a Rainbow, the Marshall Tucker Band retreat somewhat from the grittier sounds of Where We All Belong, without abandoning their country and blues roots. [The album was reissued in 2004 with the live bonus track "It Takes Time."] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
1975 ...
| | Tift Merritt Tambourine CD (2004)
Heart & Soul
$12.59
| | Doobie Brothers - Live At Wolf Trap DVD (2004)
Heart & Soul
$10.09
| | Lil Malcolm & The House Rockers Lil Malcolm & The House Rockers CD (1996)
Heart & Soul
$14.69
| | Charlie Musselwhite Tell Me Where Have All The Good Times Gone? CD (1984)
Heart & Soul
$14.65 Drummer/label head Pat Ford reunited with ...
| | Miles Davis Conception CD (1951)
Heart & Soul
$9.89 Digitally remastered by Phil De Lancie (Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, California).
CONCEPTION collects seven 1949-51 sessions by some of the musicians who were transforming bop into cool jazz. Half the album features Konitz-led sessions, with the leading alto player of his day (backed with Davis and drummer Max Roach) setting cerebral, abstract interpretations of standards like "Indian Summer" alongside Konitz's fluid original "Hibeck" and his gorgeously lyrical "Duet for Saxophone and Guitar." This is essential music that sounds as forward-looking today as it must have at the time.
The album's second half features two tracks apiece by Davis, Getz and Mulligan. "Conception" and "My Old Flame" find Davis edging from his Nonet's cool sophistication into the earthier feel of his later Prestige sides, with then-unknown Sonny Rollins contributing some Bird-like licks. Getz's lovely, intimate quartet sessions sit somewhat ...
| | Take 6 Brothers CD (1996)
Heart & Soul
$9.49 BROTHERS won the 1998 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Soul Gospel Album. "You Don't Have To Be Afraid" was nominated for a 1998 Grammy Award for Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal.
Take 6 faces the classic problem for an act that crosses genres -- in their case from gospel to R&B -- to retain what makes them so effective in their original field (and keep their original audience) while expanding their scope beyond it. They owed their original impact to the awe they inspired as six a cappella singers, and so revitalized gospel. That was on their first, million-selling album; by their third, they had added instruments and taken a more conventional approach. Here, on their fourth, they fell between chairs, with Brian McKnight's production and musical arrangements making them sound like a more wholesome Boyz II Men while they ...
| | Ryuichi Sakamoto Esperanto CD (1985) (Import) Japan
Heart & Soul
$50.89
| | Bill Whelan Riverdance & More CDs (2003) Import
Heart & Soul
$88.49
| | Carl Herrgesell Can I Change CD (2006)
Heart & Soul
$18.99
| | Lyzanxia Mindcrimes CD (2004)
Heart & Soul
$10.49
| | Bruce Cockburn Circles In The Stream CD (1977)
Heart & Soul
$13.39 Released shortly after the transitional In the Falling Dark, Circles in the Stream seemed to serve as the final chapter in Bruce Cockburn's promising yet inconsistent early career. Recorded live in Toronto, ...
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