Featured Releases

Entries in Blues (3)

VARIOUS ARTISTS - Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan

va-theme%20time%20radio%20hour.jpgIt may not feature Your trickster Host intoning his hand of tall tales (most of which are true), but unlike another such compilation of tracks broadcast on Dylan's idiosyncratic and enormously popular satellite radio show, this new ACE collection comes fully licensed and approved by its producers. With liners by a crack team of writers that are nearly as entertaining and authoritative as the tangents dispensed on Dylan's Hour itself (and that's no mean feat), any fan of American music is going to find many a mind-blowing piece of the past here.

2008 CALENDAR - Classic Blues Artwork From The 1920's

classic%20blues%202008%20calendar.jpgThis R. Crumb endorsed collection of blues artwork and music has been a long-standing holiday fave around the store for a while now. For the unfamiliar, this calendar features a superb gallery of vintage promotional artwork from blues artists in the 1920s. The calendar also includes a compilation CD that this year includes Blind Lemon Jefferson, Ma Rainey, Blind Willie McTell, and a bunch more. This is the fifth volume in a series that is supposed to run for fifteen volumes. No better time to start the collection than this year!

Posted on Monday, December 10, 2007 at 01:45PM by Registered Commentersoundscapes in , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

VARIOUS ARTISTS - The Best Of Bob Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour

va-dylan%20theme%20time.jpgStarted in 2006 and running for 50 episodes, the first season of Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour confirmed a few things: he has a great affinity for the early country/blues/folk/jazz artists that shaped him as a youth; and he is a keen observer of modern culture, as evidenced by the occasional LL Cool J, Blur or Streets tune tossed into the mix. This 2CD, 52 song release takes at least one song from each of the programs, covering themes like Hair, Coffee, Weather, and The Devil. As a collection of the roots of American Music, it's dead-on and nicely balanced between the well-known and the obscure.

Posted on Wednesday, November 21, 2007 at 03:58PM by Registered Commentersoundscapes in , , , , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint