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 1639 [Total 164 Pages]
|
| Image |
Name |
|
"Banjo" Ikey Robinson It would not be an understatement to call this CD definitive of Ikey Robinson's work since it includes every selection (except for two songs that have Half Pint Jaxon vocals) ever led by the banjoist/vocalist. The diversity is impressive, for Robinson is heard (on "Got Butter on It" and "Ready Hokum") with a hot group featuring cornetist Jabbo Smith singing the blues, performing with the Hokum Trio and the Pods of Pepper (both good-time bands), backing singer Charlie Slocum, and heading his o... |
|
"Dorseyland" Dance Parade In 1949, with the fortunes of the big bands in decline, Jimmy Dorsey carved out a seven-piece unit from his orchestra, consisting of himself on clarinet and alto saxophone, Charlie Teagarden on trumpet and vocals, Cutty Cutshall on trombone, Frank Mayne on tenor saxophone, Dick Carey on piano, Carl Kress on guitar, Bill Lolatte on bass, and Ray Bauduc on drums, with Claire Hogan contributing occasional vocals, and played old-time Dixieland music with what he called "Jimmy Dorsey & His Origina... |
|
"El Rey" Con La Banda Sinaloense "La Costena" D... |
|
"Fuego" a la Lata Like many of New York's Latin artists emerging in the late '60s and early '70s, the members of the Lat-Teens were not only steeped in their own tradition of mambo, cha cha, and rhumba, but also in the soul-driven sounds emanating from the streets they now inhabited. The results are not only Anglo-oriented band names, but also the inclusion of English-language lyrics and R&B melodies over a traditional Latino rhythm and horn section. Though this approach was more or less abandoned a short time... |
|
"i" In retrospect, "i" now seems like a crystal ball prophesying virtually every major musical development of the 1990s; from the shimmering techno of "A Love from Outer Space" to the liquid dub of "What's All This Then?," from the alien drone-pop of "Conundrum" to the sinister shoegazer miasma of "Supervixens" -- it's all here, an underground road map for countless bands to follow. Breathtaking in its scope and positively epic in its ambitions, the album is loosely organized into four sonic suit... |
|
"It" the Album |
|
"Live" Full House The J. Geils Band made many fine, sometimes great, studio albums but where they really captured their full, thrilling potential was on the concert stage. Most live albums tend to be a poor excuse for actually being at the show in question, but the Geils Band's live albums jump out of the speakers with so much joy, fun, and unquenchable rock & roll spirit that you might as well be there. "Live" Full House was their first live record, and it is a blast from start to finish. Recorded in 1972 at ... |
|
"Live" in Europe 1975 |
|
"No Snow, No Show" for the Eskimo (BBC Radio 1 ... "No Snow, No Show" For the Eskimo derives it's name from the Eskimos, a general term for the diehard Mission fans. Taken from two arena shows, one in 1988 and the other 1990, the album captures the Mission at the height of their popularity. It draws tracks from the band's first three albums, as well as a couple of B-sides, "Serpent's Kiss" and "Crystal Ocean." The band perform well and the sound is near-perfect; ironically, that's the main problem with the album. Every track is a flawless ren... |
|
"Weird Al" Yankovic Like an X-ray of a dinosaur egg, this debut Weird Al Yankovic production provides a detailed glimpse of the creature to be grown. "Another One Rides the Bus" is the earliest of his arena rock parodies, recorded in 1980 during an on-air appearance on the Dr. Demento show and a classic piece of musical humor. Already he had developed his knack of knocking the wind out of any pretentious, overblown rock anthem by slightly adjusting the lyrical content. Once one of these songs was describing the ... |
|
|
|
|