Sunday, 7 September 2008

Reviews of new pop, world and jazz music album releases

Calexico
Carried To Dust (City Slang) �11.99

Purveyors of the finest alt-country with a Mexican twist, Calexico's latest album journeys 'from the delta to the plains' through 'blackened frostbitten nights' via the imagined travelogue of a hitting Hollywood writer. Joey Burns and John Convertino's tight songwriting builds from aristocratic wire-brush drumming into a colourful collaborationism album of shimmering horns, strings and rich edgar Albert Guest vocals from Iron & Wine's Sam Beam, Amparo Sanchez and Pieta Brown. They may have alienated some fans with the indie pop of 2006's Garden Ruin but this marks a welcome return to the hushed storytelling and mariachi rhythms they know best.
Katie Toms

Metronomy
Nights Out (Because) �9.99

Since morphing from the solo project of manufacturer Joseph Mount into a three-piece, Metronomy have reinforced their report on hypnotic live shows. But any fears that their wobbly synth-pop would lose something in translation from stage to studio prove groundless. The soundtrack to a bad weekend, Nights Out is a dark-hearted gemstone, filtering a broad palette of influences � Gallic house, Italo disco, Kraftwerk, Devo � through its own lo-fi prism. 'Radio Ladio' and 'My Heart Rate Rapid' are limb-twitchers, while 'Heartbreaker' reveals aching soul.
Hugh Montgomery

Bryn Christopher
My World (Polydor) �11.99

'New Amy Winehouses' have been all the rage this year, and nowadays here's a male version to set marketing black Maria aflutter. This 21-year-old Brummie's debut certainly boasts all the correct ingredients for chart glorification in 2008: precision-tooled retro-soul tunes wrapped in slick Mark Ronsonesque production and presided over by a powerhouse of a interpreter. It's a shame there's so little of his own personality in evidence: samples from legendary soul label Stax abound, 'Smilin'' is Gnarls Barkley's 'Crazy' divested of craziness, spell a sacrilegious cover of Portishead's 'Sour Times' could be a second-rate Bond theme.
Hugh Montgomery

Emiliana Torrini
Me and Armini (Rough Trade) �11.99

She co-wrote Kylie's 'Slow', sang on the Lord of the Rings soundtrack and has six albums to her name, only Emiliana Torrini, a singer-songwriter who would appeal to fans of Dummy-era Portishead and Stina Nordenstam, has never really become common currency here. Her seventh album (the third to be released outside her native Iceland) may specify that. It begins on a series of bright notes: the upbeat reggae swing of the claim track; the jubilant hit-in-the-making, 'Jungle Drum'. Only later does the mood darken � on the one-note murder lay 'Gun' � but by then Torrini has worked her easy charm to winning gist.
Killian Fox

Old Crow Medicine Show
Tennessee Pusher (Nettwerk) �10.99

The epitome of born-again bluegrass crusaders, the Nashville quintette seemed to lose focus when they moved from old-time covers to their own material. Third time round, with Don Was producing, they find impressive form on originals that paint a vivid portrayal of the American southward and a cast of hustlers, speeding freaks, good-timers and losers, while 'Motel In Memphis' offers a well-judged tribute to Martin Luther King. The Crows' jug-band aesthetic is intact but their playing is more established, loping easy between fiddle laments and banjo-heavy barnstormers that bragging, 'If you ain't a right winger, we'll have a humdinger.' Yee-hah to that.
Neil Spencer

Allison Neale & Gary Kavanagh
Blue Concept (33 Jazz) �12.99

Don't let the small dynamic range of this medicine put you off because it more than makes up for that in subtlety and cool elegance. Allison Neale's floating alto saxophone and Gary Kavanagh's brisk trumpet make sodding partners. Four of the 11 pieces are by Gigi Gryce, an almost forgotten jazz composer of the Fifties and Sixties, whose clever but deceivingly melodious themes deserve a further audience. The unhurt set hangs together attractively, with the improvised solos discreetly contained within wide-eyed, deft arrangements. Guitarist Dave Cliff, bassist Aidan O'Donnell and drummer Matt Horne complete the band.
Dave Gelly







More info

Monday, 18 August 2008

Download Gary Moore mp3






Gary Moore
   

Artist: Gary Moore: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Blues
Jazz
Rock
Pop
Rock: Blues
Rock: Hard-Rock
Other

   







Discography:


Close as You Get
   

 Close as You Get

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 11
Back to the Blues
   

 Back to the Blues

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 10
Rockin' Every Night (Live in Japan)
   

 Rockin' Every Night (Live in Japan)

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 8
Collection
   

 Collection

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 1
Live at Monsters of Rock
   

 Live at Monsters of Rock

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 10
Scars
   

 Scars

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 14
Have Some Moore: The Best Of CD2
   

 Have Some Moore: The Best Of CD2

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 16
Have Some Moore: The Best Of CD1
   

 Have Some Moore: The Best Of CD1

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 16
Hit Collection 2000
   

 Hit Collection 2000

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 17
Victims of the Future
   

 Victims of the Future

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 8
A Different Beat
   

 A Different Beat

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 12
Out In The Fields (Bonus Disc)
   

 Out In The Fields (Bonus Disc)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 11
Desperado
   

 Desperado

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 12
Dark Days In Paradise
   

 Dark Days In Paradise

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 10
Blues For Greeny
   

 Blues For Greeny

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 11
Walkways
   

 Walkways

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 14
Ballads and Blues 1982-1994
   

 Ballads and Blues 1982-1994

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 14
Blues Alive
   

 Blues Alive

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 13
After Hours
   

 After Hours

   Year: 1992   

Tracks: 11
Still Got The Blues
   

 Still Got The Blues

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 12
After War
   

 After War

   Year: 1988   

Tracks: 11
Wild Frontier
   

 Wild Frontier

   Year: 1987   

Tracks: 11
Live At The Marquee
   

 Live At The Marquee

   Year: 1987   

Tracks: 8
We Want Moore
   

 We Want Moore

   Year: 1985   

Tracks: 10
Run For Cover
   

 Run For Cover

   Year: 1985   

Tracks: 10
Dirty Fingers
   

 Dirty Fingers

   Year: 1984   

Tracks: 10
Corridors Of Power
   

 Corridors Of Power

   Year: 1982   

Tracks: 9
G-Force
   

 G-Force

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 9
Back On The Streets
   

 Back On The Streets

   Year: 1979   

Tracks: 8
Grinding Stone
   

 Grinding Stone

   Year: 1973   

Tracks: 6
Power Of The Blues
   

 Power Of The Blues

   Year:    

Tracks: 10
Blues From A Gun CD2
   

 Blues From A Gun CD2

   Year:    

Tracks: 1
Blues From A Gun CD1
   

 Blues From A Gun CD1

   Year:    

Tracks: 1
Back to the Blues (Bonus)
   

 Back to the Blues (Bonus)

   Year:    

Tracks: 15
After the War
   

 After the War

   Year:    

Tracks: 11






One of rock's to the highest degree underrated guitarists (both from a technical and compositional percentage point of feeling), Gary Moore corpse comparatively unsung in the U.S., piece his solo work out has brought him square applaud and commercial success in most other parts of the worldly concern -- specially in Europe. Born on April 4, 1952, in Belfast, Ireland, Moore became interested in guitar during the '60s, upon discovering such blues-rock edgar Lee Masters as Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, and perchance his biggest influence of all, Fleetwood Mac's Peter Green. After relocating to Dublin later in the decade, Moore joined a local rock grouping called Skid Row, which featured a young isaac Bashevis Singer by the name of Phil Lynott, wHO would shortly after leave the group to double up on bass voice and shape Thin Lizzy. Skid Row persevered, however, eventually possibility a designate up for Moore's heroes, Peter Green and Fleetwood Mac, and fashioning such an impression on the veteran group that Green personally requested their coach help procure Skid Row a transcription compact with CBS (in addition, Green sold Moore one of his most-used guitars, a maple 1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard, which would turn Moore's primary legal document).


Skid Row would go on to military issue several singles and albums (including 1970's Slew and 1971's 34 Hours), and although the grouping mounted a few tours of Europe and the U.S., it failed to obtain breakthrough commercial succeeder, prima to Moore's issue from the mathematical group in 1972. Moore so formed his possess turnout, the Gary Moore Band (on with members drummer Pearse Kelly and bassist John Curtis), for which the guitar instrumentalist too served as utterer. But later on the trio's debut album, 1973's Grinding Stone, done for without a trace, Moore qualified up in one case more with ex-bandmate Lynott in Thin Lizzy. Moore's initial incumbency in Lizzy proved to be short-lived, however, as his fervent playing was featured on only a handful of tracks. Moore then set his sights on studio apartment act (coming into court on Eddie Howell's 1975 discharge, Gramaphone Record), earlier connexion up with a prog rock/fusion kit, Colosseum II. But in one case more than, Moore's incumbency in his latest kit was fugitive; he appeared on only trey recordings (1976's Unusual New Flesh, asset a couple in 1977, Galvanizing Savage and War Dance), as Moore recognised an invitation by his honest-to-god pal Lynott to replete in for a Thin Lizzy U.S. tour, acting arenas opening move for Queen.


Marianne Craig Moore proven to be quite a busy in 1978, as the guitarist appeared on trey other artists' recordings -- Andrew Lloyd Webber's Variations, Rod Argent's Moving Home, and Gary Boyle's Electric Glide. The same yr, Moore issued his second base solo release (most basketball team eld after his solo debut), Stake on the Streets, which spawned a surprise Top Ten U.K. hit in May of 1979, the bluesy ballad "Parisienne Walkways," and featured vocal contributions by Lynott. Moore joined forces with his Lizzy match in one case more in 1979, appearing on arguably the finest studio album of their career, Dark Rose, which proved to be a brobdingnagian hit in the U.K. (for a fine representative of Moore's particular guitar skills, check out the album's epic form of address track). But predictably, Moore ultimately exited the grouping at one time more (this time correct in the middle of a U.S. tour), as a rift had developed between Moore and Lynott. Undeterred, Moore lent some guitar mould to drummer Cozy Powell's solo release, Over the Top, in addition to forming a new kit, G Force, which would only rest together for a lonely self-titled sack in 1980.


During the early '80s, Moore united with former ELP guitarist/bassist/singer Greg Lake, coming into court on a couple of Lake solo releases (1981's self-titled release and 1983's Manoeuvres), in increase to guesting on another Cozy Powell solo release, Octopuss. But it was besides during the '80s that Moore ultimately got serious with his solo career -- issue such intemperate metal-based works as 1982's Corridors of Power, 1983's Victims of the Future, 1984's Dirty Fingers and the in concert set We Want Moore!, 1985's Run for Cover, 1987's Wild Frontier, asset 1989's Later on the War -- establishing a prominent undermentioned in Europe, scorn unexpended virtually unknown stateside. The decennium wasn't all blushful for Moore, notwithstanding -- although he was able to bandage up his friendship with Phil Lynott (coming into court with Lizzy for various tracks on Life/Live, and teaming with Lynott for a pair of tracks in 1985, "Military Man" and "Out in the Fields," the latter a U.K. hit), geezerhood of hard living at last caught up with Lynott, leading to his passage in January of 1986. Moore would afterwards devote "Wild Frontier" to Lynott, and esteemed Thin Lizzy's early frontman on the track "Blood of Emeralds" (from After the War).


FRS up with the imperativeness to pen strike singles and old-hat of his metallic musical direction, Moore returned to his vapours roots for 1990's Static Got the Blues, the nearly far-famed and best-selling release of his career, as the album featured such particular guests as Albert Collins, Albert King, and George Harrison. Moore continued in his fresh rediscovered blues stylus on such subsequent releases as 1992's Later on Hours and 1993's Vapours Alive, ahead forming the ephemeral supergroup BBM along with Cream's early rhythm section -- bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker -- which lasted for a single album, 1994's Around the Next Dream. Up future for Moore was a tribute album for Peter Green, 1995's Vapours for Greeny, which power saw him put his own personal stamp on 11 tracks either penned or performed at some point by Green. Moore experimented with different musical styles on his following deuce solo releases, 1997's Dark Days in Paradise and 1999's A Different Beat, ahead embrace the blues once more on his first release of the 21st century, 2001's Back to the Blues.


Over the long time, Gary Moore has been the matter of unnumerable compilations, the best of the crowd being 1998's metal-oriented Compendium and 2002's blues-based Charles Herbert Best of the Blues, as well as Out in the Fields: The Very Best of Gary Moore, which was split 50/50 between his metallic element and megrims excursions. Teaming with Skunk Anansie bassist Cass Lewis and Primal Fear drummer Darrin Mooney, Moore started put to work on much harder and alternative-influenced sway in the spring of 2002 and released the results as Scars. The powerful Live at Monsters of Rock from 2003 proudly declared "no overdubs used" while 2004's crude Mightiness of the Blues featured nix but the megrims, as did 2006's One-time New Ballads Blues on Eagle Records.





Jon Lord and The Hoochie Coochie Men

Friday, 8 August 2008

The Epidemic

The Epidemic   
Artist: The Epidemic

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Epidemic   
 Epidemic

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 11


Exit Paradise   
 Exit Paradise

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 10




 






Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Cascada

Cascada   
Artist: Cascada

   Genre(s): 
Dance
   Electronic
   Trance
   Dance: Pop
   Pop
   



Discography:


Truly Madly Deeply__Incl Tune Up! Remix Vinyl   
 Truly Madly Deeply__Incl Tune Up! Remix Vinyl

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2


Truly Madly Deeply (CDM)   
 Truly Madly Deeply (CDM)

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 6


Perfect Day   
 Perfect Day

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 13


Miracle   
 Miracle

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2


A Never Ending Dream   
 A Never Ending Dream

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 7


Truly Madly Deeply   
 Truly Madly Deeply

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 7


The Remix Album   
 The Remix Album

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 14


Ready for Love EP   
 Ready for Love EP

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 3


Ready for Love   
 Ready for Love

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 3


Megamix Bootleg   
 Megamix Bootleg

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 1


Everytime We Touch   
 Everytime We Touch

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 14


A Neverending Dream (Vinyl)   
 A Neverending Dream (Vinyl)

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 3


How Do You Do CDM   
 How Do You Do CDM

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 9


Miracle (CDS)   
 Miracle (CDS)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 5


Bad Boy CDM   
 Bad Boy CDM

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 4




Originally called Cascade until legal conflicts forced them to change their constitute, Cascada is the slick, uplifting Euro-dance triple featuring producers DJ Manian and Yanou along with singer Natalie Horler, although Horler is sometimes presented as Cascada herself. Horler was born in Bonn, Germany, to English parents and grew up loving all sorts of music. At age 18 she was doing studio work for various producers when she met DJ Manian and Yanou, the latter of whom had worked with DJ Sammy on the cosmopolitan dance shoot "Heaven." The trey recorded the single "Miracle" in 2004 under the discover Cascade, which was soon changed to Cascada -- Spanish for "Waterfall" -- for the second press. The single took off in German clubs and finally caught the ear of the U.S.-based Robbins Entertainment label, which had previously turned Euro-dance acts of the Apostles DJ Sammy and D.H.T. into American chart-toppers. Robbins re-released "Miracle" along with follow-up singles "Unfit Boy," "Everytime We Touch," and "How Do You Do!," which was a cover version of a Roxette song from 1992. The big strike came at the end of 2005, when DJ Sammy and Yanou encountered the song "Everytime We Touch" by Scottish singer Maggie Reilly. The trey re-recorded the tune and by mid-2006 their version was a world-wide smash, including America, where it topped the dance charts and made it into the Top Ten of the pop charts. The album Everytime We Touch as well arrived that year, and featured all the old singles along with covers of Savage Garden's "Unfeignedly Madly Deeply" and Kim Wilde's "Kids in America."