Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Latest CD purchased
OverTheRhine.COM -- Orchard > Entertainment > Music
Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36
kent
a few of the new gets that i got recently that i'm enjoying right now


Carolyn Mark- Nothing is Free
very much like Neko Case (she is in The Corn Sisters with Neko on an album) and with lots of violin and mandolin
from british columbia, canada


Holly O'Reilly (Figueroa)- Gifts and Burdens
a little folk, a little alt-country, a little americana
from seattle and the northwest


Devon Sproule- Keep Your Silver Shined
she combines together a mixture of Appalachian, folk-pop and even jazz.
from charlottesville, va


Clare Burson- Thieves
a mixture Americana, folk, indie rock and moody pop
native of nashville, now in brooklyn
bornagain
Songs of Mass Destruction - Anne Lennox ... ah, anne!

Magic - Bruce Springsteen ... i agree with the guy i read, last night, who said this is springsteen's best since The River!
bornagain
Raising Sand - Robert Plant & Alison Krauss
bornagain
She Must and Shall Go Free - Derek Webb

Gravity | Love - Sandra McCracken
bornagain
Home - Spearhead

bornagain
Document - REM ... almost thru with replacing those old cassettes. just Murmur & Fables of the Reconstruction (or is it Reconstruction of the Fables?) left.
BlondeDynamite
Raising Sand - Robert Plant & Alison Krauss
Lifeline- Ben Harper
The Shepard's Dog- Iron and Wine

smile.gif smile.gif smile.gif
joshua
Hvarf/Heim - Sigur Ros
bornagain
(guitar, vocal) - Richard Thompson

Welcome to the Atomic City - Bawn in the Mash ... we went to Ky to visit family for Thanksgiving and exchanged Christmas presents with my aunt, uncle, their daughter, and her husband. my cousin and her husband gave me this cd of this local (Paducah) band and it is quite good. kind of old-time with some other styles woven in, too. pretty fun cd!





paintedturtlegirl
from the local CD shop:

Great Lake Swimmers - Ongiara
Brett Dennen - So Much More
Red House Painters - Ocean Beach (promo) (used copy)
Toad the Wet Sprocket - Dulcinea (used copy)
coldteablues
Okay - so I can't pass up adding to the XMas collection. Here's a couple I picked up tonight:


The Brian Setzer Orchestra - Crazy Christmas

I have to admit that I love the 'big band' sound, and Setzer and his orchestra are top-notch.


Sarah McLachlan - Wintersong

Haven't gotten to give this one a listen yet. Diana Krall is featured on "Christmas Time Is Here."

Cher

np: White Christmas - The Brian Setzer Orchestra, Dig That Crazy Christmas
DaLe
The Get-Rrites ~ Pedal Steel Heaven

well, it was actually free



http://www.thegetrites.com/ - Site
Free download

and after a few listen's it is really GooD cool.gif
kent
this one was waiting for me when i came home from milwaukee


Mieka Pauley- Elijah Drop your Gun
coldteablues
Annie Lennox - Songs of Mass Destruction



I've long been a fan of hers. This is astounding.

Cher
Trudes
Beautiful. I'm a new fan.











ahiva80
my most recent purchases were cat power...the greatest.and alanis morisette the acoustic version of jagged little pill.
coldteablues
QUOTE (ahiva80 @ Dec 18 2007, 10:21 PM) *
my most recent purchases were cat power...the greatest.and alanis morisette the acoustic version of jagged little pill.


Love the acoustic of JLP even more than the original. Good choice.

Cher
bornagain
QUOTE (coldteablues @ Dec 18 2007, 07:26 PM) *
Annie Lennox - Songs of Mass Destruction



I've long been a fan of hers. This is astounding.

Cher


It is killer! I still need to pick up Diva and Medusa, sometime.
coldteablues
QUOTE (bornagain @ Dec 19 2007, 12:05 AM) *
QUOTE (coldteablues @ Dec 18 2007, 07:26 PM) *
Annie Lennox - Songs of Mass Destruction



I've long been a fan of hers. This is astounding.

Cher


It is killer! I still need to pick up Diva and Medusa, sometime.


smile.gif
DaLe
rare - Sixpence None the Richer single cool.gif



1. There She Goes (Album Mix)
2. There She Goes (Ben Grosse Remix)

and a couple of Mike Scott CD's



bornagain
Received the following from my wife for Christmas:

mercy - Sam Baker ... holy %$@! check this guy out!

At The Ryman - Emmylou Harris

Wrecking Ball - Emmylou Harris ... wow!

Medusa - Annie Lennox

Joshua Judges Ruth - Lyle Lovett ... my favorite lyle album

Murmur - REM

Nebraska - Bruce Springsteen

Mockingbird - Derek Webb

barry
"Canons" -- Phil Wickham

Simply Beautiful.....
kent
got this real cool surprise from the girls.
a incredibly packaged set of 4 cds and 1 dvd.
and it also includes about a 200 page book, with track by track commentary.
wow.


Emmylou Harris
Songbird- Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems
bornagain
QUOTE (kent @ Dec 27 2007, 09:37 PM) *
got this real cool surprise from the girls.
a incredibly packaged set of 4 cds and 1 dvd.
and it also includes about a 200 page book, with track by track commentary.
wow.


Emmylou Harris
Songbird- Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems


i bet that's great, kent! i heard emmylou interviewed on weekend edition about this project and she performed several songs with buddy miller that were discussed.
joshua
girls & boys - ingrid michaelson
bornagain
Phantom Punch - Sondre Lerche and The Faces Down
bornagain
Once (soundtrack) ... man! this best buy gift card sure is going fast. 'going to try to slow down, or it's going to be all gone before january's over.

so... i'm figuring some frames is in my future after buying this cd. after The Cost, any recommendations from anyone?

also, anyone checked out this swedish guy, jens lekman? i'm really not usually into folks that overuse sampling, but this guy sounds very talented from what i've heard online.
coldteablues


Really, really looking forward to seeing both this one AND "Juno" this weekend. It's my birth day, so what better than to treat myself to a couple of movies even though I have to drive an hour one way to see them? After listening to the ST soundtrack for the past couple of days, I'm convinced it will be good although a wee bit gory, or so I've heard.

Cher
bornagain
Late Christmas present:

Rock 'n Roll Pony - Gina Villalobos ... excellent! more acoustic than Miles Away
bornagain
Another best buy purchase came in the mail, today:

pretty world - Sam Baker ... listening to it, now. holy $%#@! i'm serious, folks. number 8 on no depression readers list of the 50 best albums of the year!

okay, just to get your attention, i'll point out that mickey grimm and rick plant play on both pretty world and mercy, baker's first cd
jnhashmi
Griffin House - Flying Upside Down
bivester

first pass thru (hitting a couple of songs or the second time randomly) and i'm really lovin' it. it's very different from "the greatest," a lot "moodier" and more low key. with an intentional "low-fi" kind of vibe.

and a very interesting selection of songs to cover.

i love it.

and the foil package is shiny.
spr


Mozarts Grand Partita. Excellent version (Orpheus Chamber Orch.) This 'Mozart collection' is very much worth looking into. It was put together I believe by a joint effort from Phillips, Deutch-Gramaphone, and Decca to assemble some of the best recorded mozart works into a single collection for his 250th birthday. There are mixed publishers for assorted CDs in the set... but all with the same themed artwork etc. The String quartets by Emerson String quartets is fab too. I have slowly accumulated about 10 of the 20 or so cds in this collection without meaning to... and have started gravitating towards them because everything I have tried form this collection is examplary. I find them the single cds in Borders... but not all of them. Amazon sells them too. The odd thing is that I see the single CD's selling for a measly $10 a crack which is insane, and the set of 20 costs $300-$400 bucks. go figure.

** Updated link: http://www.prestoclassical.co.uk/llf/-/The...rt+Collection/1
...or http://stores.moviesville.com/Items/8801721



Bach Brandenburg concertos 1-6. I read somewhere that this version (Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment) was a good one, and I think without much doubt.... that it pretty much stinks. BB#2 allegro assai drags and the trumpet plays in what can only be described as a quiet and 'nice' performance with little feeling. Much of this 2 CD set is mediocre and the recording soundscape is marginal. I've been looking for a good brandenburg set for a while now and think I will try Mariners Academy St Martin of the Fields instread, which I have also heard is very good.

hey... I have been AWOL from the orchard for months I think (long story).... just thought I would check in. Hope all is going well... I see Live from Nowhere III is due.... weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

-Steve
morninguy
QUOTE (spr @ Jan 23 2008, 03:58 PM) *


Mozarts Grand Partita. Excellent version (Orpheus Chamber Orch.) This 'Mozart collection' is very much worth looking into. It was put together I believe by a joint effort from Phillips, Deutch-Gramaphone, and Decca to assemble some of the best recorded mozart works into a single collection for his 250th birthday. There are mixed publishers for assorted CDs in the set... but all with the same themed artwork etc. The String quartets by Emerson String quartets is fab too. I have slowly accumulated about 10 of the 20 or so cds in this collection without meaning to... and have started gravitating towards them because everything I have tried form this collection is examplary. I find them the single cds in Borders... but not all of them. Amazon sells them too. The odd thing is that I see the single CD's selling for a measly $10 a crack which is insane, and the set of 20 costs $300-$400 bucks. go figure.

** Updated link: http://www.prestoclassical.co.uk/llf/-/The...rt+Collection/1
...or http://stores.moviesville.com/Items/8801721



Bach Brandenburg concertos 1-6. I read somewhere that this version (Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment) was a good one, and I think without much doubt.... that it pretty much stinks. BB#2 allegro assai drags and the trumpet plays in what can only be described as a quiet and 'nice' performance with little feeling. Much of this 2 CD set is mediocre and the recording soundscape is marginal. I've been looking for a good brandenburg set for a while now and think I will try Mariners Academy St Martin of the Fields instread, which I have also heard is very good.

hey... I have been AWOL from the orchard for months I think (long story).... just thought I would check in. Hope all is going well... I see Live from Nowhere III is due.... weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

-Steve


Steve ~ Give Il Giardino Armonico a try for the Brandenburgs. I love their sound. They're a hip young Milan ensemble & they know their period instruments. They're on Teldec.
spr
Steve ~ Give Il Giardino Armonico a try for the Brandenburgs. I love their sound. They're a hip young Milan ensemble & they know their period instruments. They're on Teldec.

....thank you sir knight.... I will look into that little morsel of info. Im so picky... likely just being a p.i.t.a...
coldteablues
yojimbo
QUOTE (bivester @ Jan 22 2008, 11:41 PM) *

first pass thru (hitting a couple of songs or the second time randomly) and i'm really lovin' it. it's very different from "the greatest," a lot "moodier" and more low key. with an intentional "low-fi" kind of vibe.

and a very interesting selection of songs to cover.

i love it.

and the foil package is shiny.


Not to mention the poster that came with the advance version is hot hot hot.

I like that Spanish song she sang.
spr


not to bore you all again with classical junk, but I just couldnt pass this up. Just ordered from Amazon...

170 CDs, $115 bucks. A complete set of Mozart.
http://www.amazon.com/Mozart-Complete-Work...3597&sr=8-1

Reviews @ amazon were to me, surprisingly good. I bet some of these will be marginal and obscure recordings, but I expect a good portion of it to be decent. We will see. They have a set like this for Bach too... but I will wait to see how this one pans out.

Will be able to rip these at a high bitrate into the new 160G ipod too with no problem. I have about 650 CDs in there, 30 movies and about 3,000 digital photos and still have 40 gigs left. Im going to be busy, busy listening to this for a while methinks.

hey... I get excited easily. tongue.gif

-Steve
kent


stripped down, simplistic, beautiful
bivester
QUOTE (kent @ Jan 29 2008, 09:13 PM) *


stripped down, simplistic, beautiful

yes, it is.
morninguy
QUOTE (bivester @ Jan 29 2008, 09:25 PM) *
QUOTE (kent @ Jan 29 2008, 09:13 PM) *


stripped down, simplistic, beautiful

yes, it is.


Agree agree agree Real good stuff here....Hats off to Shelby and to producer Phil Ramone - 5 players & Shelby & in a week this is done ! That's what I'm talkin' bout !!
spr
QUOTE (kent @ Jan 29 2008, 09:13 PM) *

stripped down, simplistic, beautiful

Hey now... this is pretty good.

I avoided this because it had been lumped into a 'country' genre (gasp) by a few, and I didnt know any better. I normally shy away from that.

This fits in nice in between Eleni Mandell and Norah Jones. Classic noir vocal melodic goodness.

As usual, I can count on the orchard for some good leads... another somebody I didnt know about. Thanks!
bivester
just watch for shelby's sister, allison moorer's new one, "mockingbird" on 2/19.

QUOTE
"MOCKINGBIRD"

The running thread - and I didn't notice it at the time -is strength…Even if they're not hitting
you over the head, they are strong songs, coming from a worldly place, yet the language is really
feminine…and people lose sight of that strength, courage and dignity that is womanly.”

When Allison Moorer decided to make a record of other people's songs, you know she wasn't just going to grab a handful of whatever and set her slow burning alto to them like a low flame to dry twigs. No, the woman whose very first single was nominated for an Academy Award, whose albums have been marked by an artistic restlessness and passion and whose willingness to expose her deepest truths has yielded some of pop music's subtlest, but most enduring treasures wanted to do something special - and in looking around the vastness of American music, she realized how much of the glory of women songwriters was overlooked and oversimplified.

“I think true feminity is not encouraged,” she says in that smoky drawl. “In the music business, you have two little boxes. Either you're a whirly twirly girl or you're a too-angry raging woman - and that's just not even close. Men face their own share of problems, but they don’t face that.”

Certainly Moorer - working with producer and acclaimed roots artist Buddy Miller - have conjured a rich pastiche of the phases of women's hearts, lives, needs and yearnings. Whether it's a dervish take on Patti Smith's “Dancing Barefoot,” a stoic, proud embrace of Kate McGarrigle's “Go, Leave,” a winking nod to the naughty that is Nina Simone's “Sugar In My Bowl” or the elegant survival of her sister Shelby Lynne's “She Knows Where She Goes, the lithe songstress demonstrates diversity, eclecticism and the range of the XX chromosome set.

“I wanted to do this record to become a better writer,” the now New York-residing, former Alabama-girl concedes. “I have spent years and years in my own head and my own little world, and this was a break to explore how other singer/songwriters experience life,”
Laughing, she concedes, “It made me a better singer, too… Both working with Buddy and considering how these lyrics, melodies and emotions fell. This got me to stretch vocally more than I have in a long time, so that growth was thrilling.”

Cut over a little less than a week's time in Buddy Miller's Dogtown Studio, what Moorer thought might be a quiet meditation on emotional tides and gilded moments of loss and desire turned into something far more dynamic, a bit surprising and ultimately thrilling for her.

“Every time I go into the studio with a notion of how it's gonna be, it always comes out differently. If you go in with a severe notion of how something's gonna be and you cling to it, you sometimes come out with something that is so much less than it could be - and to me, at this point in my life, it's seeing how the idea grows that is so fascinating.

“I started with around 40 songs, culled it down to 24 by the time I got to Buddy - because there were soooo many songs once I got started that it felt like they all should be heard. But Buddy's instincts about the songs and what would suit me were great… He knew I could do more than I did, actually! He definitely kept it from being a really quiet record… He brought a lot of dynamics to it, and made it kick in places.”

Whether it was learning to play acoustic guitar in open G for an elegiac take on Joni Mitchell's knowingbeyond-her-years “Both Sides Now,” putting husband Steve Earle's thumb to good use on Ma Rainey's swampy “Daddy Good-bye Blues,” the hushed string section and French boite accordion that bathes “Go, Leave” or embracing the Gershwin-esque beauty of Cat Powers' “Where Is My Love,” it is the interpretation that ignites the subtlest possibilities within the songs… and that also open up caverns of nuance in Moorer's and the largely organic band's performances.

For Moorer, who penned the title song, it was also about honoring the women who inspired her, calling attention to some who may've been overlooked and exploring songs that demonstrate the real female perspective. It was a labor of love as much as an unearthing.

“There were certain things… I couldn't make this record without including a Joni Mitchell tune because where would girls with guitars be without her? The same goes for Patti Smith,” Moorer laughs. “Without her, there is a whole slew of women who wouldn’t have known where they fit in.” I wanted to make sure there were songs from some artists who were influential to me - Jessi Colter's 'I'm Looking For Blue Eyes' was the first song my Dad taught me to sing… And I wanted to include some people who were overlooked, because maybe people don't realize who the McGarrigles are or that June Carter Cash wrote 'Ring of Fire.'

“That image (a ring of fire) is exactly what the first throes of falling in love feels like. It's dangerous and people know that, but they don't really care… and she captures that! I don't think anyone, though, has ever explored how pretty it is and how sweet and smart. It really sums the whole complicated mess of emotions up in a very few words.”

In the complexity is the truth. In the simplicity is the essence. Yet far be it from Moorer to suggest that this is the definitive work on women songwriters. “Oh, my… yes,” she explains, almost apologetically, “There is no Lucinda (Williams), no Carly (Simon), no Stevie (Nicks), no Emmylou (Harris). There's no a lot of people! I couldn't do everyone I loved… and it came down to what could I bring the most to, what my gut wanted to do and my spine knew was right.”

“The thing about a lot of these songs,” says the woman whose voice is the essence of late nights, old quilts and vintage brandy, “they have so many layers. The further into them you go, the more you see… Look at the Ma Rainey song: in the first verse, she's frustrated, in the next confused, then pissed off, then in the last verse, she's sad. It really sums up a relationship and to me, it sounded like real life, because that's how real life really is.

“People might wanna make women singer/songwriters these 2-dimensional, what's defined as ‘hot things in the marketplace,’ but just like real life, female artists are so much more interesting than that. If you can capture the intelligence, the emotions, the rest of it… which is what we tried to do… well, you've got something.”

Listening to Mockingbird, you do. It's an album of subtlety, sensuality, smolder and grace. For a woman who's always walked the line between slow burning erotic charge and being both tender and aware, what else would there be?
bornagain
QUOTE (bivester @ Jan 30 2008, 03:35 PM) *
just watch for shelby's sister, allison moorer's new one, "mockingbird" on 2/19.


i will be very curious to hear what this sounds like. i haven't picked up any of allison's stuff since the hardest part, which was pretty strong stuff!
jnhashmi
Leaving Through the Window by Something Corporate
bornagain
QUOTE (morninguy @ Jan 29 2008, 08:50 PM) *
QUOTE (bivester @ Jan 29 2008, 09:25 PM) *
QUOTE (kent @ Jan 29 2008, 09:13 PM) *


stripped down, simplistic, beautiful

yes, it is.


Agree agree agree Real good stuff here....Hats off to Shelby and to producer Phil Ramone - 5 players & Shelby & in a week this is done ! That's what I'm talkin' bout !!


best thing i've heard of hers since I Am Shelby Lynne! anybody else get the Best Buy exclusive copy with the bonus dvd of the two songs from the Belcourt show, back in the fall? it's good stuff and not songs included on the cd.
coldteablues
QUOTE (bornagain @ Feb 2 2008, 09:48 PM) *
QUOTE (morninguy @ Jan 29 2008, 08:50 PM) *
QUOTE (bivester @ Jan 29 2008, 09:25 PM) *
QUOTE (kent @ Jan 29 2008, 09:13 PM) *


stripped down, simplistic, beautiful

yes, it is.


Agree agree agree Real good stuff here....Hats off to Shelby and to producer Phil Ramone - 5 players & Shelby & in a week this is done ! That's what I'm talkin' bout !!


best thing i've heard of hers since I Am Shelby Lynne! anybody else get the Best Buy exclusive copy with the bonus dvd of the two songs from the Belcourt show, back in the fall? it's good stuff and not songs included on the cd.


I saw her on "Tavis Smiley" sometime this week and was intrigued by this CD. It may be going on my list.
spr

meh. exactly what you would expect. Nothing overly exciting here at first blush.


I also got these by Great Lake Swimmers just now... took them 6 weeks to get here....



I really loved Oniagra.... cant wait to try these 2 on for size.
kent

Ida- Lovers Prayers
I think this is their best work, their first release in 3 years.
A wonderful folk-pop sound with a melancholy hushed feel to it.
Recorded at Levon Helm's studios in Woodstock, NY.
bornagain
QUOTE (kent @ Feb 6 2008, 09:43 PM) *

Ida- Lovers Prayers
I think this is their best work, their first release in 3 years.
A wonderful folk-pop sound with a melancholy hushed feel to it.
Recorded at Levon Helm's studios in Woodstock, NY.


The March Paste sampler included their cover of Richard & Linda Thompson's For Shame of Doing Wrong, which has really sparked my interest in this band. I understand they've been around for quite a while. What other recordings of theirs do you recommend? Thanks.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2009 Invision Power Services, Inc.