Bringing It Back
Bringing It Back
Track Listings
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1. Taste My Sin
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2. Dreams Bleed On
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3. Blessed Majesty
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4. Heavens Final War
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5. Nothing Left
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6. Hated of the World
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7. Lost Without You
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8. Burn It Down
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9. To Die For
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Bringing It Back,Integrity,Deathwish Inc,Heavy Metal,Industrial,Industrial Dance,Pop,Punk,Rock
Average customer rating:
- THE most influential album of the sixties
- bringing it all back to where it belongs
- BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME IS BOB DYLAN AT HIS VERY BEST !
- A good place to start
- Folk Rock's Definitive Masterpiece
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Bringing It All Back Home
Bob Dylan
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Contemporary Blues
| Blues
| Styles
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General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
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General
| Pop
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| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
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Pop Rock
| Pop
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Blues Rock
| Rock
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Folk Rock
| Rock
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General
| Rock
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General
| Classic Rock
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Sony
| Computers Brands
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| Electronics
| Desktops
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| Networking
| Notebooks
Similar Items:
- Highway 61 Revisited
- The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan
- The Times They Are A-Changin'
- Blonde on Blonde
- Another Side of Bob Dylan
ASIN: B00026WU9Q
Release Date: 2004-06-01 |
Tracks:
- Subterranean Homesick Blues
- She Belongs To Me
- Maggie's Farm
- Medley: Love Minus Zero/No Limit
- Outlaw Blues
- On the Road Again
- Bob Dylan's 115th Dream
- Mr. Tambourine Man
- Gates Of Eden
- It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
- It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
Amazon.com
"You sound like you're having a good old time," a purist Dylan fan is spotted telling the artist in the documentary Don't Look Back just after the release of this, his first (half-)electric album. He certainly does. Updating Chicago blues forms with hilarious, tough lyrics--in fact, all but stealing the meter of Chuck Berry's "Too Much Monkey Business" for "Subterranean Homesick Blues"--on one side, dropping some of his most devastating solo acoustic science ("It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," "Mr. Tambourine Man") on the other, the first of Dylan's two 1965 long-players broke it right down with style, substance, and elegance. --Rickey Wright
Customer Reviews:
THE most influential album of the sixties.......2007-07-16
This is IT.
This is where, in retrospect, it all started. I didn't realize it at the time but I do now. There were two sixties, the early 60-64, Beach Boys, Frankie Avalon, early Beatle "I Want to Hold you Hand", crew-cut, A-line dress, boufant hair, weejun sixties, and the other sixties, the Revolver, Sgt Pepper, Jimi Hendrix, Steppenwolf, The Doors, Led Zeppelin, Cream, United States of America, sixties that everyone today thinks was the sixties which happened after 1965. and it started here!
Bob Dylan, the antiwar, civil-rights, Woody Guthrie-imitating darling of the folksingers, the Voice and Conscience of his Generation, after penning "Blowin in the Wind", and "The Masters of War", stunned his purist followers with "Bringing it All Back Home". Electric instruments and a turn from trying to change the world by preaching at it to a bemused surreal satire. This, and "Revolver" are the two most influential albums of the sixties, maybe of music history. I remember.
The Beatles were wildly popular with younger listeners, but generally dismissed by music critics of the time as being a wildly sucessful but totally Pop phenominon. Dylan said they were "Bubblegum". Dylan's friend Al Aronowitz (sp?), said that the Beatles weren't that bad. Dylan and friend were introduced to the Beatles at a certain party in Manhattan AUG 64, wherein there was some smoking. Dylan and Lennon talked and found they had a lot in common. Dylan suggested Lennon should put more of his feelings into his songs. Following this party the Beatles became much more introspective, and a few months later "Rubber Soul" and "Revolver'!. See DVD "No Direction Home" directed by Martin Scorsese for details...
"Johnnies in the basement
mixing up the medicine,
I'm on the pavement
Thinkin' about the government...
...Maggie comes, fleet feet,
Face full of black soot
Talkin the the Heat put
Plants in the bed, but
The phones tapped, anyway,
orders from the D.A.,
say they must bust in early May...
"...Keep a clean nose,
Watch for Plainclothes,
You don't need a Weatherman
To know which way the wind blows!...
...Please her, please him.
Twenty years of schoolin'
and they put you on the Day Shift"...
How that for starting off with a (paranoid) bang? The first rap song about being surveilled in a police state.
(and where are those Weathermen, now ...?)
or how about the heartfelt:
"...She's got everything she needs
she's an artist
She don't look back.
she can take the dark out of the nighttime
and paint the daytime black..."
or the workaday world of:
"...He hands you a nickel,
He hands you a dime,
He askes you with a grin if you're having a good time?
And he fines you every time you slam the door.
I aint gonna work on Maggie Farm no more..."
(have you had bosses like that?)
or the surreal 115th dream:
"I was riding on the Mayflower when I thought I spotted land
I yelled for captain Arab, I'll have you understand,
Who came running to the deck, said 'boys, forget the whale
we're goin over yonder, cut the engines, change the sail' ...
...I think I'll call it 'America' I said as we hit land.
I took a deep breath, I fell down, I could not stand...
...A telephone was ringing, it just about blew my mind,
When I picked it up and said 'Hello', this foot came through the line...
...I repeated that my friends were all in jail with a sigh,
He gave me his card, he said 'call me if they die'..."
"...I said,'you know, they refused Jesus, too'
he said 'you're NOT Him'..."
Now those are lyrics!
Pure poetry, funny, insightful. The sheer volume of Dylan's genius is so overwhelming you can only get it in small amounts - I remember I didn't understand all at first. I still hear new ideas in these songs after all these years. Notes from the Underground.
And the backup band isn't "The Band", as I always thought, it's blues guitar great Michael Bloomfield and Al Kooper, trying to learn organ.
After this brilliant album, Dylan met and influenced the Beatles. The folkies (who had played for years in coffee shops where they learned to play and sing harmony and write meaningful songs) all picked up electric instruments. Country Joe and the Fish, Lovin Spoonful, etc. The Byrds did an electric version of his Pied Piper song "Mr Tambourine Man" ("...take me disappearing through the smoke rings of my mind..."). Then came Donovan's "Sunshine Superman", Vanilla Fudge's "You Keep me Hangin On". After that, there was a sea change in culture and in popular music. There was an explosion.
It started here.
This album cannot be recommended too highly (despite the fact that Dylan doesn't have a singing voice like Jim Morrison or Frank Sinatra).
bringing it all back to where it belongs.......2007-05-27
I used to fluctuate between this and Blonde On Blonde - or the rougher, leaner sound of Highway 61 Revisited, but neither really captured the Dylan i could and do identify with the most. This is not to say that there are not *plenty* of other songs (some less popular, like "up to me" ) that i don't just love, the way i love the riff to East Laredo Blues, but on the whole, i have to say that it is this album that does what the title promises... it delivers... it brings it all back home and wow, what a wallop it packs.
The set-list you can easily find here so i won't go through it all, but to miss this album would be to miss some of the classic Dylan and that would be to deny yourself just the chance to see whether or not you like this minstel or not. You may decide not - but don't make that decision until you've at least heard this one.
Dylan albums, like Dylan songs, are difficult to choose a "favorite." I'd be hard-pressed to pick a favorite Dylan song, but if i have to pick an album, and i admit this is tough, then this would be it.
Cheers,
s.r.p.
BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME IS BOB DYLAN AT HIS VERY BEST !.......2007-04-26
Bob Dylan's 1965 album Bringing It All Back Home is arguably his best work. It includes three of his very best songs, the magical Mr. Tambourine Man, the darkly disparaging It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding), and his tale of absolute reality, The Gates of Eden. These three are performed folk style with just an acoustic guitar and harmonica. On the album's first song, Subteranean Homesick Blues, Dylan rap-sings forboding lyrics over an electric guitar blues. He then rocks Maggie's Farm, becomes a surreal storyteller in Bob Dylan's 115th Dream, folk-sings his obligatory hate-song, It's All Over Now, Baby Blue, and even rolls out a love song (sort of) with Love Minus Zero/ No Limit, were he sings words of praise about the woman he loves.
My love she speaks like silence,
Without ideals or violence,
She doesn't have to say she's faithful,
Yet she's true, like ice, like fire.
Pure Dylan. Bringing It All Back Home has everything for the Bob Dylan fan. Folk songs, rock songs, and classic Dylan lyrics. It's a great album from a great artist at his very best.
A good place to start.......2007-03-12
Bringing It All Back Home, released in 1965, is Bob Dylan's first flirtation with electric rock/ blues. Since the album is half electric and half acoustic, it is a perfect place for new fans of Dylan to start because they get a sample of both his electric rockstar side and his folk singer side.
The album has quite a diverse selection of songs; fast, bluesy songs ("Subterranean Homesick Blues", "Maggie's Farm", "Outlaw Blues"), slower, melodic love ballads ("She Belongs To Me", "Love Minus Zero/ No Limit"), poetic folk songs ("Mr. Tambourine Man", "Gates Of Eden") and comedy ("Bob Dylan's 115th Dream"). One of the best songs on the album is the surreal "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue". This song always fills me with inspiration everytime I listen to it.
This is a great album and a good place to start.
Folk Rock's Definitive Masterpiece.......2007-02-10
Bob Dylan, the great alchemist of folk-rock music, was booed at the Newport Folk Festival, and Scorsese's 'No Direction Home' documents the hecklers yelling out "Traitor!" at many concerts. Perhaps like any genius this is the inscrutable, but predictable development for anyone who truly innovates the wheel. 'Bringing It All Back Home' is the culprit that showcases the trajectory of when Bob, the Bard, went electric. Arguably, this album is one of the three best of his entire career. It is perhaps his most innovative, but his achievements have a scope that render the past two assertions needing a huge dose of salt.
Heralding the album, "Subterranean Homesick Blues," while not as dramatic as "Like a Rolling Stone" is easily as brilliant. Complete with cutting, social commentary and plenty of images to debunk the nine-to-five existence, Dylan spills out his surreal period full throttle. Anthems rain with the raunchy "Outlaw Blues" and the folky "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)". Hypnotic, every song pulls a punch--or doesn't pull any punches! The most famous mesmerizing development is "Mr. Tambourine Man," making Dylan a troubadour for altered consciousness*. Despite the crossover, Dylan continued to be a great storyteller. The first person "Maggie's Farm" showcases his familiar wit with the details of menial labor from hell. Then, "On the Road Again" captures the same idea, but with more of a vagabond flair. "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" meets every element at the crossroads by telling a surreal story with pointed observations. However, some of the most delightful moments reflect upon love. "She Belongs to Me" and "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" both exalt and debunk the romantic tradition he helped overthrow. "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" ends the album with a brilliant story about a misfit who trashes every sensibility of romantic notions.
An unqualified achievement, 'Bringing It All Back Home' synthesizes the outlaw with the dreamer where both folk and rock, tradition and iconoclasm meet head on and make music and culture new.
(*Dylan has moved on, and hopefully so can we.)
Average customer rating:
- You Tell Me Santa Claus
- Folk Rock's Definitive Masterpiece
- Never Heard a Better Album Than This One
- Interesting and important transitional album
- Defective CD for Bringing it all Back Home
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Bringing It All Back Home
Bob Dylan
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Contemporary Blues
| Blues
| Styles
| Music
General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Blues Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Folk Rock
| Rock
| Styles
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General
| Rock
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Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Highway 61 Revisited
- The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan
- Blonde on Blonde
- Blood on the Tracks
- Another Side of Bob Dylan
ASIN: B0000C8AVX
Release Date: 2003-09-16 |
Tracks:
- Subterranean Homesick Blues
- She Belongs to Me
- Maggie's Farm
- Love Minus Zero/No Limit
- Outlaw Blues
- On the Road Again
- Bob Dylan's 115th Dream
- Mr. Tambourine Man
- Gates of Eden
- It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
- It's All over Now, Baby Blue
Amazon.com essential recording
"You sound like you're having a good old time," a purist Dylan fan is spotted telling the artist in the documentary Don't Look Back just after the release of this, his first (half-) electric album. He certainly does. Updating Chicago blues forms with hilarious, tough lyrics--in fact, all but stealing the meter of Chuck Berry's "Too Much Monkey Business" for "Subterranean Homesick Blues"--on one side, dropping some of his most devastating solo acoustic science ("It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," "Mr. Tambourine Man") on the other, the first of Dylan's two 1965 long-players broke it right down with style, substance, and elegance. --Rickey Wright
Customer Reviews:
You Tell Me Santa Claus.......2007-07-05
I have tried to place HIGHWAY 61 and BLONDE ON BLONDE ahead of this one (just as all those entrenched and over-hyped rock critics uniformly do), but can't. This remains his best (along with BLOOD ON THE TRACKS). "Mr. Tambourine Man" is like an eternal morning.
Folk Rock's Definitive Masterpiece.......2007-05-09
(Oooops! I meant 5-stars!) Bob Dylan, the great alchemist of folk-rock music, was booed at the Newport Folk Festival, and Scorsese's 'No Direction Home' documents the hecklers yelling out "Traitor!" at many concerts. Perhaps like any genius this is the inscrutable, but predictable development for anyone who truly innovates the wheel. 'Bringing It All Back Home' is the culprit that showcases the trajectory of when Bob, the Bard, went electric. Arguably, this album is one of the three best of his entire career. It is perhaps his most innovative, but his achievements have a scope that render the past two assertions needing a huge dose of salt.
Heralding the album, "Subterranean Homesick Blues," while not as dramatic as "Like a Rolling Stone" is easily as brilliant. Complete with cutting, social commentary and plenty of images to debunk the nine-to-five existence, Dylan spills out his surreal period full throttle. Anthems rain with the raunchy "Outlaw Blues" and the folky "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)". Hypnotic, every song pulls a punch--or doesn't pull any punches! The most famous mesmerizing development is "Mr. Tambourine Man," making Dylan a troubadour for altered consciousness*. Despite the crossover, Dylan continued to be a great storyteller. The first person "Maggie's Farm" showcases his familiar wit with the details of menial labor from hell. Then, "On the Road Again" captures the same idea, but with more of a vagabond flair. "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" meets every element at the crossroads by telling a surreal story with pointed observations. However, some of the most delightful moments reflect upon love. "She Belongs to Me" and "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" both exalt and debunk the romantic tradition he helped overthrow. "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" ends the album with a brilliant story about a misfit who trashes every sensibility of romantic notions.
An unqualified achievement, 'Bringing It All Back Home' synthesizes the outlaw with the dreamer where both folk and rock, tradition and iconoclasm meet head on and make music and culture new.
(*Dylan has moved on, and hopefully so can we.)
Never Heard a Better Album Than This One.......2007-03-10
This is a truly great album from cover to cover. The mix of folk, rock, blues, acoustic and electric is dazzling. Dylan is in a class all his own when it comes to writing and delivering a song. It's All Right Ma and Subterranean Homesick Blues are Dylan at his wordsmithing best. To my mind, Dylan's 4 great albums are this one, Freewheelin', Highway 61 and Blood on the Tracks. I've never understood the acclaim that Blonde on Blonde gets. To me, it sounds like he's drunk on about half the songs and his vocals are way off key in many places. If I could take one album to a desert island, it would certainly be a Dylan and this would probably be the one.
Interesting and important transitional album.......2007-01-18
Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" is a CD filled with strange and dramatic and poetic images. This is a transitional album before he bacame less acoustic and more electric in his music. In that sense, it presages the wonderful and powerful "Highway 61 Revisited," which marks his final break from the folk/protest period of his career. But this is clearly a transitional album.
There is a softer side to the work, including songs such as "She Belongs to Me" and "Love Minus Zero/No Limits" and "It's All over Now, Baby Blue."
On the other hand, there is the wild and crazy ride of the album's title song. Lines burst forth with telling images; electric guitar is in the foreground. Some lines that stand out:
"You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind's blowing"
"20 years of schooling and they put you on the day shift"
"Don't follow leaders, watch the parking meters"
On "Maggie's Farm," the listener gets a dozen reasons why the singer doesn't want to work on Maggie's Farm anymore.
"Bob Dylans's 115th Dream" is one of my favorites, as one gets a series of strange and weird images, as Captain Arab and his crew visit America. The song starts with Dylan beginning the song and bursting into laughter--and then starting over again. The images of this song are well worth attending to. One line sticks out. As the singer tries to find someone to help him get Captain Arab out of jail (a long story there), he says to someone "They refused Jesus." To which the person responded "Well, you're not him."
"Mr. Tambourine Man" is a well known classic that does not diminish with time. "Outlaw Blues" has one stumbling into a lagoon, at 3 below zero at 3 in the afternoon. "On the Road Again" features, again, evocative images. "Gates of Eden": "It's all right ma, I can make it." This song features images that stick with the listener as well.
This is a strong album, and well worth listening to.
Defective CD for Bringing it all Back Home.......2007-01-05
The original CD was defective, so I returned it, and a replacement was promptly provided, efficiently and conveniently. But, the replacement was defective too!! I threw the damned thing away. I don't have the time to keep requesting replacement CDs. All the other CDs I have ordered through Amazon work fine; just Bringing it all Back Home; two consecutive defective CDs.
Go figure. I am very disatisfied with this transaction.
Average customer rating:
- One of the Twenty Greatest Rock/Folk Ever
- The Best Record Ever Recorded
- Dylan at his Best
- What about "Outlaw Blues"?
- One of Bob Dylan's All Time Best
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Bringing It All Back Home
Bob Dylan
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Contemporary Blues
| Blues
| Styles
| Music
General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Blues Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Folk Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Highway 61 Revisited
- The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan
- Another Side of Bob Dylan
- Blonde on Blonde
- John Wesley Harding
ASIN: B0000024SD
Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Subterranean Homesick Blues
- She Belongs To Me
- Maggie's Farm
- Love Minus Zero / No Limit
- Outlaw Blues
- On The Road Again
- Bob Dylan's 115th Dream
- Mr. Tambourine Man
- Gates Of Eden
- It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
- It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
Amazon.com essential recording
"You sound like you're having a good old time," a purist Dylan fan is spotted telling the artist in the documentary Don't Look Back just after the release of this, his first (half-) electric album. He certainly does. Updating Chicago blues forms with hilarious, tough lyrics--in fact, all but stealing the meter of Chuck Berry's "Too Much Monkey Business" for "Subterranean Homesick Blues"--on one side, dropping some of his most devastating solo acoustic science ("It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," "Mr. Tambourine Man") on the other, the first of Dylan's two 1965 long-players broke it right down with style, substance, and elegance. --Rickey Wright
Customer Reviews:
One of the Twenty Greatest Rock/Folk Ever.......2006-11-27
Even the extra clever and superlative insightfulness that all the reviewers write here cannot capture this thing that must be heard. Not listening to it is missing a key part of the puzzle.
The Best Record Ever Recorded.......2006-09-04
Bringing it All Back Home is, in my humble opinion, the best record ever recorded. On it there is Bob Dylan at his acoustic best with songs such as "Gates of Eden" and "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding). Also on this album is Dylan as he was first heard playing electric with the outstanding "On the Road Again" and "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream." And if you can get though "115th Dream" without realizing Bob Dylan is just about the greatest American poet who ever lived, well you should go back to school and study literature. This album also includes three of my favorite Dylan songs, almost acoustic, just a little electric with that beautiful guitar playing along with his young voice, and they are "She Belongs to Me," "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue." And of course you gotta listen to that song that includes the no good, rotten, doctor commie rat,"Maggie's Farm." This is the Dylan record everybody should own. It's just fantastic.
Dylan at his Best.......2006-08-19
While I flip-flop on the issue, today I consider this Dylan's finest album. When I first heard it back in the 70's, I considered the electric side dated and amateurish. Any pre-Hendrix guitar work was always going to sound behind the times, and it was just too - well, lo-fi! But the circle has turned, and lo-fi is in again, and this album miraculously sounds better than ever. The acoustic side, though, is the true miracle, with two of Bob's best-ever songs, "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "It's Alright Ma." If you've only heard the Byrds' version of Tambourine Man, you haven't heard the song. Nobody but Dylan can write songs that can be tough and tender at the same time, and he never did it better than right here.
What about "Outlaw Blues"?.......2006-05-13
I'm carrying for good luck my black tooth? Every reviewer forgets to mention "Outlaw Blues". It's almost the complete embodiment of Dylan as a credo. "Don't ask me nothin bout nothin cause I just might tell you the truth". That one line could be a review for every Dylan song ever written.
One of Bob Dylan's All Time Best.......2006-04-02
It's very hard to pick out your favorite Dylan record, but this one would be in my top five. I love "Baby Blue", "Love - 0" and "She Belongs to Me" three songs that prove Dylan knew than (and still does) how to write and perform a first-rate tune. His voice on those songs is just so moving, as are the lyrics in "It's Alright Ma." That song really makes you think, makes you want to go out and participate, make a difference. Yes, this is the first album where Dylan uses a band, were he goes electric, but the two acoustic songs are two of his very best. And, like I said a few sentences ago, this is one of Dylan's best all time albums.
Average customer rating:
- Arkensa yeah
- Self Indulgence Posing As Hip
- you just crave for some more
- Top-notch EP from the best rock n' roll band in America.
- great album from the best band
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Bringing It All Back Home Again
The Brian Jonestown Massacre
Manufacturer: Which
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Indie Rock
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
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Garage Rock
| Rock
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Neo-Psychedelia
| Rock
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
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| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
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General
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| Stores
| Music
Rock
| Alternative Rock
| Indie Music
| Stores
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Similar Items:
- And This Is Our Music
- Strung Out in Heaven
- Thank God for Mental Illness
- Bravery Repetition and Noise
- Methodrone
ASIN: B00000IX6V
Release Date: 2001-12-04 |
Tracks:
- Way It Was
- Mansion in the Sky
- Reign On
- Godspell According to Newcombe
- All Things Great and Small
- Arkansas Revisited
Amazon.com
On their ninth CD, the Brian Jonestown Massacre does what they're best at. That is, they conjure up visions of Beggars Banquet-era Rolling Stones and other artists from the swinging '60s. Emphasizing acoustic slide guitars, harmonica, handclaps, and tambourine, Anton Newcombe sings passionately in Jaggeresque style. While decidedly retro, the band is always entertaining as they evoke their musical heroes. On the song "Mansion in the Sky" Newcombe recalls the mood of early Dylan with evocative results. Folksy, bluesy, and particularly understated, this disc contains only six songs and leaves you hungry for more. With Miranda Lee Richards's haunting vocal on "Reign On" and an eerie update of Charles Manson's composition "Arkansas," Brian Jonestown Massacre turns six into nine one more time. It's brief, but bright, and their most satisfying work to date. --Mitch Myers
Album Description
Back in Print- the infamous 1999 EP contains six rambling, american via manson ditties including " Mansion In the Sky" and "The Godspell According to A.A. Newcombe".
Several of these songs are featured in the film " DIG".
Album Description
1999 CDEP from the kings of everything strange and dangerous in rock and roll. A six track 30 minute conceptual piece, this is all that is BJM and so much more. Digipack.
Customer Reviews:
Arkensa yeah.......2006-06-03
This is a brilliant record. The music floats between quiet and beautiful tracks like 'reign on'... then on to the fun, hellraising blasphemy of the 'godspell according to Newcombe'. the last track, 'arkensa revisited', is as crazily cool as it is dangerous. Note the charles manson reference.
"Goin' back to Arkensa, gonna kill my ma and pa...gonna kill my ma and dad cause they made my life so sad."
Self Indulgence Posing As Hip.......2006-04-21
Don't get me wrong. I'm a huge fan. But this one really stinks. With the exception of the song Miranda Lee Richards sings on, "Reign On", this is a mess. I got excited when I saw that one song was by Charlie Manson but "Arkansas" is one of the worst songs on this self indulgent collection of not songs as much as half-baked (pun intended) ideas for jams. Skip this one and
get "Methodrone", "Strung Out In Heaven", "Give It Back" or "And This Is Our Music" if you want to hear Anton & Company really rock and/or space out with way better melodies and lyrics than this one.
you just crave for some more.......2006-02-07
Named after a classic Bob Dylan album, this EP is one the finest recording the Jonestown ever did. Only 6 songs that clocks-in less than half an hour. When the disc is over, you just crave for some more. Recorded by any means, with almost no drums or bass, The BJM welcomes here Miranda Lee Richards and her beautiful and eerie voice. Hard to find but definitely worth the looking.
Top-notch EP from the best rock n' roll band in America........1999-09-20
BJM continue - with this brilliant, countrified-bluesy 6-tracker - to cut a blistering path through the history of American music. No-one can touch them. If you doubt, check out 1998's sublime "Strung Out in Heaven" or 1996's neglected blues-folk-rock masterpiece "Thank God for Mental Illness". They are one of the few bands in American music worth dying for. Name my pill Anton!!!!
great album from the best band.......1999-07-12
About six months ago I discovered the band known as Brian Jonestown Massacre. I first bought Strung out in Heaven (which I highly recommend) then this album. I have to say that this is the best band of the ninties. With all the mass confusion of sound going around this is a breath of fresh air. They define the meaning of music. They are true muscians who are in it for the love of music. They will never sell out to the "industry". I recommend any album they have made and I am sure you will throughly enjpy it.
Average customer rating:
- Beautiful CD
- Irish - yes, Luka - no.
|
Bringing It All Back Home, Vol. 3
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Valley
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Country
| Styles
| Music
General
| Traditional Country
| Country
| Styles
| Music
General
| Bluegrass
| Country
| Styles
| Music
Contemporary
| Bluegrass
| Country
| Styles
| Music
General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Irish Folk
| Traditional British & Celtic Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Celtic Folk
| Traditional British & Celtic Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Traditional Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Britain
| British Isles
| Europe
| International
| Styles
| Music
Ireland
| British Isles
| Europe
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| Celtic
| International
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Folk Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Bringing It All Back Home: The Influence of Irish Music at Home and Overseas
ASIN: B00004GOVL
Release Date: 2000-03-07 |
Tracks:
- Equinox - Davy Spillane
- You Couldn't Have Come At A Better Time - Luka Bloom
- Moran's Return - Noilaig Casey/Arty McGlynn
- All Messed Up - Pierce Turner
- Glen Road To Carrick/The Wild Irish Man - Paddy Glackin/Seamus Glackin/Kevin Glackin
- Thousands Are Sailing - Philip Chevron
- Cooler At The Edge - Sonny Condell
- Tunes - Roger Sherlock/Bobby Casey/John Bowe/Tom Nagle/Eilish Byrne/Siobhan O'Donnell
- Easter Snow - Catherine Ennis/Liam O'Flynn
- A Stor Mo Chroi - Rita & Sara Keane
- Blue - An Emotional Fish
- An T-Aiseiri - Noirin Ni Riain/The Monks Of Glenstall Abbey
- Don't Let Our Love Die - The Everly Brothers
- Operator - De Dannan & Friends
- Carolans Farewell To Music - Maire Ni Chathasaigh
Product Description
1. Equinox - Davy Spillane
2. You Couldn't Have Come At A Better Time - Luka Bloom
3. Moran's Return - Noilaig Casey/Arty McGlynn
4. All Messed Up - Pierce Turner
5. Glen Road To Carrick giWild Irish Man, The - (with Paddy Glackin/Seamus Glackin/Kevin Glackin)
6. Thousands Are Sailing - Philip Chevron
7. Cooler At The Edge - Sonny Condell
8. Tunes - Roger Sherlock/Bobby Casey/John Bowe/Tom Nagle/Eilish Byrne/Siobhan O'Donnell
9. Easter Song - Catherine Ennis/Liam O'Flynn
10. Stor Mo Chroi, A - Rita/Sara Keane
11. Blue - An Emotional Fish/Maire Ni Bhroanain
12. T-Aiseiri, An - Norin Ni Riain/The Monks OF Glenstall Abbey
13. Don't Let Our Love Die - The Everly Brothers
14. Operator - De Danann/Friend
15. Carolans Farewell To Music - Maire Ni Chathasaigh
Format: CD
Customer Reviews:
Beautiful CD.......2005-01-12
I love this cd particularly the cut T-Aiséirí - Noirin Ni Riain she has the most haunting voice,I purchased this some years ago and my children still love the song by Luka Bloom
Irish - yes, Luka - no........2000-03-10
Caution! If you are thinking about buying this cd because you are a Luka Bloom fan, as I am, forget it. Sixteen cuts and he performs only one song. This album is a collection of Irish music with many and varied performers. If you enjoy celtic music then give it a go. Otherwise, choose again.
Average customer rating:
|
Symphony 9: Introduction to Dvorak
Dvorak
Manufacturer: Naxos
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Symphonies
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Instructional
| Miscellaneous
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- An Introduction to Brahms' Piano Concerto No. 2
- Classics Explained: Pastoral Symphony
- An Introduction to Vivaldi's "The Four Seasons"
- An Introduction to Schubert's Piano Quintet "Trout"
- Classics Explained: Brandenburg Concertos 4 & 5
ASIN: B000069HGK
Release Date: 2002-09-17 |
Average customer rating:
|
Bringing It All Back Home - Volume 2
Dolores Keane with Mick Hanly , Ricky Skaggs - Paddy Glackin - Mark O'Connor , John Spillane , The Waterboys , Elvis Costello with mary Coughian , Cooney & Begley , Richard Thompson with Mary Black and Dolores Keane , Emmylou Harris - Dolores Keane - Mary Black , Liam O'Flynn , and Tony McMahon
Manufacturer: Valley Entertainment
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
ASIN: B000MGMILG |
Product Description
Bringing It All Back Home - Volume 2 //
1. My Love Is In America - Dolores Keane with Mick Hanly
2. St. Anns Reel/The Blackberry Blossom - Ricky Skaggs - Paddy Glackin - Mark O'Connor
3. Johnny Don't Go To Ballincollig - John Spillane
4. Oilena/Island - Micheal O'Sulleabhain and The Irish Chamber Orchestra
5. The Bucks Of Oranmore - The Hughes Band
6. A Song For The Life - The Waterboys
7. Mischievous Ghost - Elvis Costello with mary Coughian
8. The Japanese Hornpipe - Cooney & Begley
9. Im Long Me Measaim - Peadar ORiada and Cor Cuil Aodh
10. Waltzing's For Dreamers - Richard Thompson with Mary Black and Dolores Keane
11. Port Na BPucai - Tony McMahon
12. Carolina Star - The Lee Valley String Band
13. Grey Funnel Line - Emmylou Harris - Dolores Keane - Mary Black
14. Gone Girl - Cowboy Jack Clement
15. A Stor Mo Chroi - Liam O'Flynn
Average customer rating:
- Music Across the Water
- They could have done better
|
Bringing It All Back Home, Vol. 2
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Valley
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Outlaw & Progressive Country
| Country
| Styles
| Music
General
| Traditional Country
| Country
| Styles
| Music
Contemporary
| Bluegrass
| Country
| Styles
| Music
General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Irish Folk
| Traditional British & Celtic Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Traditional Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Britain
| British Isles
| Europe
| International
| Styles
| Music
Ireland
| British Isles
| Europe
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| Celtic
| International
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Bringing It All Back Home: The Influence of Irish Music at Home and Overseas
- Flyer
ASIN: B00000IL5D
Release Date: 1999-06-22 |
Tracks:
- My Love Is In America - Dolores Keane
- St. Anns Reel/The Blackberry Blossom - Ricky Skaggs/Paddy Glackin/Mark O'Connor
- Johnny Don't Go To Ballincollig - John Spillane
- Oilena/Island - Micheal O'Sulleabhain/The Irish Chamber Orchestra
- The Bucks Of Oranmore - The Hughes Band
- A Song For The Life - The Waterboys
- Mischievous Ghost - Elvis Costello
- The Japanese Hornpipe - Cooney & Begley
- Im Long Me Measaim - Peadar ORiada/Cor Cuil Aodh
- Waltzing's For Dreamers - Richard Thompson
- Port Na BPucai - Tony McMahon
- Carolina Star - The Lee Valley String Band
- Grey Funnel Line - Emmylou Harris/Dolores Keane/Mary Black
- Gone Girl - Cowboy Jack Clement
- A Stor Mo Chroi - Liam O'Flynn
Product Description
1. My Love Is In America - Dolores Keene/Mick Hanley
2. St. Anne's Reel giBlackberry Blossom, The - (with Ricky Scaggs/Paddy Glackin/Mark O'Connor)
3. Johnny Don't Go To The Ballincollig - John Spillane
4. Oilena giIsland - (with Michael O'Sulleabhain/John McCarthy)
5. The Bucks Of Oranmore - The Hughes Band
6. A Song For The Life - The Waterboys
7. Mischievous Ghost - Elvis Costello/Mary Coughlan
8. The Japanese Hornpipe - Cooney & Begley
9. Im Long Me Measaim - Peadar O'Raida/Cor Cuil Aodh
10. Waltzings For Dreamers - Richard Thompson/Mary Black/Dolores Keane
11. Port Na Bpucai - Tony McMahon
12. Carolina Star - The Lee Valley String Band
13. Grey Funnel Line - Emmylou Harris/Delores Keane/Mary Black
14. Gone Girl - Cowboy Jack Clement
15. A Stor Mo Chroi - Liam O'Flynn
Format: CD
Customer Reviews:
Music Across the Water.......2003-03-01
This album, part II of the soundtrack of a TV documentary, accompanied by a book of the same title, illustrates the bi-directional influences of Irish and Scottish music on American folk and the return influence of the latter, especially with the advent of recorded music. Twould be unfair to expect a better selection as the music chosen is intended to make the point. We could obviously find many, many other songs, variations on the words and so on but this work is an editors nightmare and a master work of its kind.
They could have done better.......2001-09-18
This is a compilation of Irish music - suggesting the profound influence on American music- they could have made better selections
Average customer rating:
- The Best Record Ever Recorded
- One of Bob Dylan's All Time Best
- I Wish Dylan Were Young Today
- Bob Dylan Goes Electric
- Folk Rock is Born
|
Bringing It All Back Home
Bob Dylan
Manufacturer: Sony Japan
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Contemporary Blues
| Blues
| Styles
| Music
General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Blues Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Folk Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
Folk
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Classic Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- John Wesley Harding
- Another Side of Bob Dylan
- Freewheelin' Bob Dylan
- Highway 61 Revisited
- Nashville Skyline (Japan LP Sleeve)
ASIN: B0002CHQWG
Release Date: 2004-11-09 |
Tracks:
- Subterranean Homesick Blues
- She Belongs to Me
- Maggie's Farm
- Love Minus Zero/No Limit
- Outlaw Blues
- On the Road Again
- Bob Dylan's 115th Dream
- Mr. Tambourine Man
- Gates of Eden
- It's Alright, Ma
- It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
Album Description
Japanese pressing of the singer/songwriter's 1965 album, packaged in a limited edition miniature LP sleeve. CBS. 2004.
Album Details
Limited Edition Japanese LP-STYLE Sleeve Replicating the Original Album Release Artwork and Style.
Customer Reviews:
The Best Record Ever Recorded.......2006-09-04
Bringing it All Back Home is, in my humble opinion, the best record ever recorded. On it there is Bob Dylan at his acoustic best with songs such as "Gates of Eden" and "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding). Also on this album is Dylan as he was first heard playing electric with the outstanding "On the Road Again" and "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream." And if you can get though "115th Dream" without realizing Bob Dylan is just about the greatest American poet who ever lived, well you should go back to school and study literature. This album also includes three of my favorite Dylan songs, almost acoustic, just a little electric with that beautiful guitar playing along with his young voice, and they are "She Belongs to Me," "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue." And of course you gotta listen to that song that includes the no good, rotten, doctor commie rat,"Maggie's Farm." This is the Dylan record everybody should own. It's just fantastic.
One of Bob Dylan's All Time Best.......2006-04-03
It's very hard to pick out your favorite Dylan record, but this one would be in my top five. I love "Baby Blue", "Love - 0" and "She Belongs to Me" three songs that prove Dylan knew than (and still does) how to write and perform a first-rate tune. His voice on those songs is just so moving, as are the lyrics in "It's Alright Ma." That song really makes you think, makes you want to go out and participate, make a difference. Yes, this is the first album where Dylan uses a band, were he goes electric, but the two acoustic songs are two of his very best. And, like I said a few sentences ago, this is one of Dylan's best all time albums.
I Wish Dylan Were Young Today.......2006-04-03
My favorite song on this record is "Subterranean Homesick Blues." I keep picturing that video in my mind of a very young Bob Dylan, flipping those cards to the beat of this song. "115th Dream" is another song with those great lyrics that only Dylan can write. He is certainly a poet, there is no denying that. I Love it's Alright, Ma." But every time I hear the version on this early record, my ears subconsciously hear all the the applause that you hear erupting during the live version on "Before the Flood" when Dylan shouts out, "Sometimes even the President of the United States must have to stand naked." That song worked then. It works now. We need a young troubador to help us find our way in these troubled times. But, I suppose nobody listened then, so I guess they wouldn't listen now. Still, I'd like a young Dylan today raging against all the injustice that abounds.
Bob Dylan Goes Electric.......2006-04-03
Well not for all of the songs, the protest songs "Gates of Eden" and "It's Alright, Ma" are songs with just Dylan and his guitar, but the others all have at least an electric guitar in them. "Maggie's Farm" is a rocker and one that might raise your social conscience. Even after all these years I must confess that I still don't understand "Mr. Tambourine Man," but I love it dearly. I adore the slow songs and love to laugh at the lyrics in "Homesick" and "Bob's Dream." This is a must own album not only for Dylan fans, but for everybody. That's what I think anyway.
Folk Rock is Born.......2006-04-03
This record starts of with the very fast, very electric, almost rap-like, "Subterranean Homesick Blues." I can only imagine what Bob Dylan's folkie fans thought about that. I've read that they thought it was a betrayal, but I've also read that this is the record that put Dylan right out there, made him as big as the Beatles and the Stones, bigger even. People had heard of him and he'd had a couple hits, but this was rock and roll man. This was a band, and a darned good one. There are some ripping good songs on this record. "Maggie's Farm", "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream", and of course the three slow songs, "She Belongs to Me", "Love Minus Zero-No Limit" and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," that Dylan would be singing at concerts for years to come. This record marks a change for Dylan, one of many he'd be going through over the years. It is simply a wonderful record.
Average customer rating:
- Kilkelly Ireland
- hmmm .. definitely not a dvd
- Buy the CD for just two of the songs
- OK but a better collection could have been had
|
Bringing It All Back Home, Vol. 1
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Valley
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Outlaw & Progressive Country
| Country
| Styles
| Music
General
| Traditional Country
| Country
| Styles
| Music
Contemporary
| Bluegrass
| Country
| Styles
| Music
British Folk
| Traditional British & Celtic Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Irish Folk
| Traditional British & Celtic Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Celtic Folk
| Traditional British & Celtic Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Traditional Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| Compilations
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
General
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| Celtic
| International
| Styles
| Music
Rock
| Celtic
| International
| Styles
| Music
Ireland
| British Isles
| Europe
| International
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Folk Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Country Rock
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Folk
| Indie Music
| Stores
| Music
Traditional Folk
| Folk
| Indie Music
| Stores
| Music
General
| International
| Indie Music
| Stores
| Music
Celtic
| Europe
| International
| Indie Music
| Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- Bringing It All Back Home: The Influence of Irish Music at Home and Overseas
ASIN: B00000C2FG
Release Date: 1998-10-27 |
Tracks:
- April The 3rd - Donal Lunny And Friends
- Nothing But The Same Old Story - Paul Brady
- Sonny - Emmylou Harris, Dolores Keane, Mary Black
- Rose Connoly - Everley Brothers
- Kevin Griffins - Sharon Shannon, M. Custy, Eoin O'Neill
- When First Into This Country - Lee Valley String Band
- No Frontiers - Mary Black
- Idir Eatarthu/Between Worlds - Micheal O'Suilleabhain And The Irish Chamber Orchestra
- Lakes Of Ponchartrain - Hothouse Flowers
- Humours Of Galway - De Danann
- The Dimming Of The Day - Richard Thompson
- Shoals Of Herring - Clancy Brothers
- Kikelly - Mick Moloney, Jimmy Keane, Robbie O' Connel
- Western Highway - Maura O' Connel
- The Parting Glass - Voice Squad
Product Description
1. April The 3rd - Donal Lunny & Friends
2. Nothing But The Same Old Story - Paul Brady
3. Sonny - Emmylou Harris/Dolores Keane/Mary Black
4. Rose Connolly - The Everly Brothers
5. Kevin Griffins - Sharon Shannon/Mary Custy/Eoin O'Neill
6. When First Into This Country - The Lee Valley String Band
7. No Frontiers - Mary Black
8. Idir Eatarthu - Micheal O Suilleabhain & The Irish Chamber Orchestra giBetween Worlds - Micheal O Suilleabhain & The Irish Chamber Orchestra
9. Lakes Of Ponchartrain - Hothouse Flowers
10. Humours Of Galway - De Danann
11. Dimming Of The Day, The - Richard Thompson/Mary Black/Dolores Keane
12. Shoals Of Herring, The - Clancy Brothers
13. Kilkelly - Mick Moloney/Jimmy Keane/Robbie O'Connell
14. Western Highway - Maura O'Connell
15. The Parting Glass - The Voice Squad
Format: CD
Customer Reviews:
Kilkelly Ireland.......2006-03-10
Well I just wanted the song "Kilkelly Ireland" and I got it. There are also some other lovely songs on the CD. Easy listening at it's best
hmmm .. definitely not a dvd.......2005-12-01
i bought this thinking it was the dvd of the series ...but it was a music cd from the series.. don't get me wrong as a music cd it is great, and i fully intend to keep it. but, someone should fix the product description ... please.
Buy the CD for just two of the songs.......2002-07-25
It's not often that I run into a compact disc accompanying a film that I return to again and again for college teaching, but this is one of those pairs. *Bringing It All Back Home* is certainly worth owning for the performances of "Kilkelly" and "Sonny," two of the most powerful English-language songs of the Irish-American diaspora ever written. Both songs are heard in wonderful performances (and seen in performance in the filmed version). "Sonny," however, is the true show-stopper. The voices of Emmylou Harris, Mary Black, and Delores Keane seem to have been fated to fit together, and their musicianship makes a simple song complex and subtle.
Don't look for a compendium of Irish traditional music here. This album (especially, of the three volumes in the set) is drawn from the film and thus fits the film's outline, not that of an anthology producer. Gathering such a lineup was a feat in itself, and the collection is both substantial and entertaining.
OK but a better collection could have been had.......2001-09-18
This actually applies to all three albums which are a compilation of the Irish influence on American music. While many of the songs are interesting - I believe there are much better sets.
Music Track:
- Command of the New Rock
- Concrete Killers
- Crazy from the Heat
- Creative Killings
- Descent into Chaos [Import]
- Double Live Annihilation [Import]
- Dr. Feelgood [Extra tracks] [Import] [Limited Edition] [Original recording remastered]
- Dwelling in the Out
- Extreme II: Pornograffitti
- Face the Heat [Import]
Music Track
music track
Recommended Music:
Sour Juice and Rhyme
Lebendige Vergangenheit: Gino Bechi, Vol. 2
Made Myself Lonesome
Music: Misery with a Beat
Music for the People
Ovalcommers
Panorama: Melodies De Hawaii [Import]
Scab Dates
Receiver
On the Night
Scary Monsters [Enhanced]
Mexiclanos Unidos [Clean]
Pimpin' on Wax [Clean]
Respighi: Pines of Rome/Fountains of Rome/Roman Festivals
Carlinhos Brown Es Carlito Marron