Albums Directory on Weblo Music
|
Browse Albums Directory on Weblo Music: |
| # | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
|
Record 1 - 10 of 288 [Total 29 Pages]
|
| Image |
Name |
|
Z Music |
|
Z.T.'s Blues An all-star lineup has Turrentine with Grant Green on guitar and Tommy Flanagan on piano. The rhythm section has Paul Chambers on bass and Art Taylor on drums. Green and Turrentine made few albums together, but the combination is a natural -- the two greatest groove masters, bar none. Flanagan seldom appears in this type of setting and his playing is very tasteful. A studio recording by Rudy Van Gelder at Englewood Cliffs, NJ. If you can find a copy of this, it is a keeper. |
|
Z.Z. Hill The initial step in Hill's amazing rebirth as a contemporary blues star, courtesy of Jackson, Mississippi's Malaco Records and producers Tommy Couch and Wolf Stephenson. The vicious blues outings "Bump and Grind" and "Blue Monday" were the first salvos fired by Hill at the blues market, though much of the set -- "Please Don't Make Me (Do Something Bad to You)," "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" -- was solidly in the Southern soul vein. |
|
Z: 300 Anos de Zumbi Gilberto Gil, recently named as Brazil's minister of culture, has always trodden a very individual path in Brazilian music. But even by his own standards, this is an unusual work. The Zumbi of the title is a Brazilian hero. He founded Palmares Quilombo, a place in Brazil where escaped and freed slaves could live as they had in Africa. Until closed by the Portuguese, Palmares Quilombo lasted almost 100 years. Z is a celebration of the man, conceived as a ballet, celebrating the 300th anniversa... |
|
Za, Cafe Table Musik Battiato was originally a pop musician, but by the early '70s he was getting into far more avant-garde material. On this one, he goes even further than usual, with something even more minimal than Terry Reilly or Steve Reich. "Za," the whole first side (or first track) of the CD, is just a single repetitive piano chord over and over and over again, almost unvarying. It might be a good piece to fall asleep to with its hypnotic qualities, but otherwise Battiato's concept seems to have gotten th... |
|
Za-Za Za-Za starts out with a bang, but the scattershot approach to stardom (copping AC/DC's attitude with petty theft of Van Halen's playfulness and Bon Jovi's ballads) seems like a desperate measure; after all, Warner Bros. banked on Bulletboys to be a leader, not a follower. That's fine for some folks who look at the L.A. metal scene as a source of good, consistent product, but most fans were just as happy to get their fix from longstanding acts like Mötley Crüe and Ratt. Producer Ted Templeman ... |
|
Zabumbê-Bum-Á |
|
Zachariah |
|
Zack Attack |
|
Zack's Bon Ton Zachary Richard has been among Cajun music's finest performers during the 1980s and '90s, and this late-'80s session was one of his finest. The 12 tracks included hot versions of "Jolie Blonde," "La Valse de Grande Riviere" and "Ma Petite Fille Est Gone." Richard also demonstrated his country proficiency with a heady cover of Johnny Horton's "The Battle of New Orleans," as well as "Big River" and "Take Me Deep (Song For C)." The Bon Ton Playboys also include outstanding musicians in fiddler R... |
|
|
|
|