Showing posts with label Jeff Lynne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Lynne. Show all posts

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Traveling Wilburys - 2 albums: The Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 / The Traveling Wilburys Vol 3

Reversing the usual process by which groups break up and give way to solo careers, the Traveling Wilburys are a group made up of solo stars. The group was organized by former Beatle George Harrison, former Electric Light Orchestra leader Jeff Lynne, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, and Roy Orbison, thus representing three generations of rock stars. In 1988, the five (who had known each other for years) came together to record a Harrison B-side single and ended up writing and recording an album on which they shared lead vocals. It turned out to be a way to transcend the high expectations made of any of them as individuals, and a delighted public sent the album to number three, with two singles, "Handle With Care" and "End of the Line" hitting the charts. Unfortunately, Orbison died of a heart attack only a few weeks after the album's release.

Two years later, the remaining quartet released a second album, inexplicably titled Vol. 3. Although it didn't match the success of the first Wilburys album, it was another million-selling hit. Throughout the '90s, there were rumors of another Traveling Wilburys record in the works, but no new albums from the group surfaced. Harrison and Lynne did re-team in 1995, when Lynne produced and reworked two John Lennon demos with the Beatles for their Anthology rarities collection.

The Traveling Wilburys albums drifted out of print in the late '90s, making the 2007 release of The Traveling Wilburys Collection -- a double-disc set containing both albums, plus a bonus DVD -- a noteworthy affair. It debuted at number one in the U.K. and nine in the U.S., eventually earning platinum and gold certifications in the respective countries. In 2016, the collection saw a re-release on Concord. ~William Ruhlmann

Album: The Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:14
Size: 82.9 MB
Styles: Roots, Rock
Year: 1988
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. Handle With Care
[3:28] 2. Dirty World
[2:58] 3. Rattled
[3:50] 4. Last Night
[3:23] 5. Not Alone Anymore
[3:30] 6. Congratulations
[3:35] 7. Heading For The Light
[3:16] 8. Margarita
[5:27] 9. Tweeter And The Monkey Man
[3:26] 10. End Of The Line

The Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1

Album: The Traveling Wilburys Vol 3
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:02
Size: 82.5 MB
Styles: Roots, Rock
Year: 1990
Art: Front

[3:13] 1. She's My Baby
[3:34] 2. Inside Out
[3:12] 3. If You Belonged To Me
[3:18] 4. The Devil's Been Busy
[3:18] 5. T7 Deadly Sins
[3:14] 6. Poor House
[3:04] 7. Where Were You Last Night
[3:33] 8. Cool Dry Place
[3:16] 9. New Blue Moon
[3:19] 10. You Took My Breath Away
[2:55] 11. Wilbury Twist

The Traveling Wilburys Vol 3

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Various - Buddy Holly: Listen To Me

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:49
Size: 100.3 MB
Styles: Rock
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:57] 1. Stevie Nicks - Not Fade Away
[2:26] 2. Pat Monahan - Maybe Baby
[2:42] 3. Brian Wilson - Listen To Me
[2:05] 4. Imelda May - I'm Lookin' For Someone To Love
[3:04] 5. Jackson Browne - True Love Ways
[2:49] 6. Cobra Starship - Peggy Sue
[3:27] 7. The Fray - Take Your Time
[1:49] 8. Ringo Starr - Think It Over
[2:27] 9. Chris Isaac - Crying Wishing Hoping
[2:32] 10. Linda Ronstadt - That'll Be The Day
[2:02] 11. Jeff Lynne - Words Of Love
[2:25] 12. Lyle Lovett - Well All Right
[3:27] 13. Natalie Merchant - Learning The Game
[2:39] 14. Patrick Stump - Everyday
[2:52] 15. Zooey Deschanel - It's So Easy
[2:58] 16. Eric Idle - Raining In My Heart

Songmasters has launched a series called Listen to Me which pays tribute to the true, great and original icons of rock music. Listen To Me: Buddy Holly inaugurates the series in an album produced by Peter Asher, featuring music greats Stevie Nicks, Pat Monahan, Brian Wilson, Imelda May, Jackson Browne, Cobra Starship, The Fray, Ringo Starr, Chris Isaak, Linda Ronstadt, Jeff Lynne, Lyle Lovett, Natalie Merchant, Patrick Stump, Zooey Deschanel, Eric Idle.

Buddy Holly, the true, great, and original recording artist featured in Listen To Me programs this year, continues to be an essential component of rock ‘n’ roll’s historical catalog as seen from Universal Music Enterprises (UME) continuous sales of its Buddy Holly: Millennium Collection, which is the No. 1 seller of the Holly catalog. More than fifty years later, new fans continue to discover the genius of Holly and his accolades continue to grow through projects such as Listen To Me: Buddy Holly.

Buddy Holly: Listen To Me

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Jeff Lynne - Long Wave

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 26:57
Size: 61.7 MB
Styles: Standards, Pop-Rock
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. She
[2:19] 2. If I Loved You
[2:30] 3. So Sad
[2:51] 4. Mercy, Mercy
[2:08] 5. Running Scared
[2:17] 6. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
[2:29] 7. Smile
[2:31] 8. At Last
[2:29] 9. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
[1:48] 10. Let It Rock
[2:52] 11. Beyond The Sea

A mere 22 years after his last solo album, 1990’s Armchair Theatre, the man described by The Washington Times as “the fourth greatest record producer in history” returns with two. One, Mr. Blue Sky, features ELO classics. The other is this collection: a love-letter to the songs Jeff Lynne heard on his dad’s radio, songs which inspired him while growing up in Birmingham. Having famously worked with Dylan, Harrison, Orbison and Ringo, the pop polymath now plays everything himself, a one-man band moving across a dewy sound-bed of nostalgia.

A subjective labour of love akin to Bowie’s Pin-Ups or Ferry’s These Foolish Things, which also carries elements of stripped-down self-exposure (like Johnny Cash’s American Recordings or Tom Jones’ Spirit in the Room), it’s infused with warm melancholy. If it never crackles with startling candour, you sense that’s because he wants to pay simple homage to the tunes that formed him, rather than whip out his youthful diaries.

Many selections are "pre-rock" 1950s standards, with a few fairly well-known but not over-familiar 60s nuggets also summoned. Perhaps surprisingly, Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered, and Love Is a Many Splendored Thing work wonderfully well. Lynne has never been an ostentatious singer but knows how to arrange to perfection, even in this understated mode. The echoing shadows of Richard Hawley’s music come to mind. We could all probably live without another version of Charlie Chaplin’s cheesy Smile, but he does make it chug along effectively. Don’t expect ELO-style baroque-and-rococo flourishes: for the most part Long Wave ticks with paced, poignant precision. There’s further subdued romance in the readings of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s If I Loved You and the evergreen She, once crooned by Charles Aznavour. A louche, atypically throwaway take on Bobby Darin’s Beyond the Sea is a damp squib, and a couple of trad blues-rockers only remind the listener of ELO’s Roll Over Beethoven. But Lynne’s elegiac streak emerges again on Etta James’ At Last and The Big O’s Running Scared. Lynne doesn’t try to break any moulds here, but respectfully doffs a cap at those that shaped him. ~Chris Roberts

Long Wave

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Jeff Lynne - Long Wave

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 24:28
Size: 56.0 MB
Label: Frontier Records
Styles: Pop/rock
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:19] 1. If I Loved You
[2:30] 2. So Sad
[2:51] 3. Mercy, Mercy
[2:14] 4. Running Scared
[2:18] 5. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
[2:30] 6. Smile
[2:32] 7. At Last
[2:29] 8. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
[1:49] 9. Let It Rock
[2:52] 10. Beyond The Sea

When Jeff Lynne was growing up, he listened to music on longwave radio, soaking up all the sounds coming through the big radio in the living room. His 2012 tribute to these days, appropriately called Long Wave, is a far-reaching salute to the glory days of pop in the years before the Beatles. It's too easy to peg this as a standards album, a designation that isn't quite accurate. Lynne may cover many show tunes along with '50s favorites of big-band vocalists but he spends nearly as much time with rock & roll, and not just the operatic pop of his fellow Traveling Wilbury Roy Orbison, either. He cranks through Chuck Berry's "Let It Rock," slides into the silken harmonies of the Everly Brothers on "So Sad," and grooves through Don Covay's "Mercy, Mercy." These are the cuts that stick the closest to the original hit recordings. When Lynne tackles Rodgers & Hammerstein ("If I Loved You"), Rodgers & Hart ("Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered"), Fain & Webster ("Love Is a Many Splendored Thing"), and Chaplin ("Smile"), he breaks the song down to its melodic basics then builds up candied, layered arrangements that are distinctly his own, suggesting the gorgeous cascades of sound that were the signature of prime ELO. Indeed, when these sweet reinterpretations are combined with the straight-ahead rockers, Long Wave adds up to a blueprint in reverse for Lynne; by going to back to his beginnings, he winds up figuring out why he went in the direction he did. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Jeff Lynne (vocals, guitar, piano, keyboards, vibraphone, drums, background vocals); Marc Mann (strings); Steve Jay (shaker, tambourine).

Long Wave