Showing posts with label Ringo Starr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ringo Starr. Show all posts

Friday, September 1, 2017

Ringo Starr - Photograph: The Very Best Of Ringo

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:21
Size: 158.8 MB
Styles: Pop/Rock
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:56] 1. Photograph
[3:00] 2. It Don't Come Easy
[2:49] 3. You're Sixteen You're Beautiful (And You're Mine)
[3:19] 4. Back Off Boogaloo
[3:26] 5. I'm The Greatest
[4:13] 6. Oh My My
[3:23] 7. Only You (And You Alone)
[2:32] 8. Beaucoups Of Blues
[2:18] 9. Early 1970
[3:22] 10. Snookeroo
[2:32] 11. No No Song
[3:01] 12. Goodnight Vienna (It's All Down To)
[3:42] 13. Oo-Wee
[3:44] 14. Have You Seen My Baby
[5:22] 15. Six O'clock
[3:54] 16. Weight Of The World
[5:24] 17. Never Without You
[3:00] 18. Act Naturally
[2:21] 19. Wrack My Brain
[3:55] 20. Fading In And Fading Out

Hard as it is to believe but there has not been a proper Ringo Starr hits collection since the first, 1975's Blast from Your Past -- that's not counting 1989's Starr Struck: Best of Ringo Starr, Vol. 2, which was designed as a companion to that earlier set -- until 2007's Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr. Blast from Your Past was released just five years after his debut, Sentimental Journey, but it ignored that collection of pop standards, along with much of its country cousin Beaucoups of Blues, winding up as a collection of highlights of 1973's Ringo and 1974's Goodnight Vienna, with a few non-LP hit singles rounded up within the LP's tight ten-track, 30-minute span. Ringo kept recording after Blast, working his way through several labels and ill-advised phases before settling into a nice, easy groove with 1993's Time Takes Time, but he stopped having hits not long after 1975, after the Elton John/Bernie Taupin "Snookeroo" climbed all the way to number three, capping off a remarkable streak of seven Top Ten singles. After that, the crash was fast: "Oo-Wee" was pulled off of Vienna and stalled at 31, then there was just one more hit -- "A Dose of Rock & Roll," peaking at 26 in 1976 -- before a five-year wait until the George Harrison-written "Wrack My Brain" limped to 38 in 1981 before Ringo disappeared from the charts. His '90s comeback may have never dented Billboard, but it is represented on the 20-track Photograph, which also contains all the aforementioned singles (apart from "Oo-Wee," no great loss) and the entirety of Blast from Your Past, albeit presented in a different running order. This doesn't just make for a compilation that's longer than the 1975 set, it makes for one that's better, since it adds the terrific "(It's All Down to) Good Night Vienna" to the mix, along with the amiable 1976 cover of Bruce Channel's "Hey Baby," a duet with Buck Owens on "Act Naturally" from 1989, and a well-chosen selection from each of Time Takes Time, 1998's Vertical Man, 2003's Ringorama, and 2005's Choose Love. This may not hit all the great stuff from the early '70s -- after all, the whole of Ringo is exceptionally strong -- but it does cut out all the real embarrassing stuff from the late '70s and just concentrates on the good latter-day material that holds its own with the best of his '70s hits. Far from merely being songs that are good when graded on a curve, these hits have aged really well, especially his originals: "It Don't Come Easy," the thundering glam rocker "Back Off Boogaloo," the cheerfully post-Beatles autobiography of "Early 1970" and "Photograph," his gorgeous collaboration with George, which lends this comp its title and ranks as among the very best post-Beatles songs by any of the Fab Four. That tune proves Ringo could deliver music every bit as memorable as his colleagues and much of this excellent, long overdue compilation is at a similar high standard. [Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr also includes entertaining track-by-track commentary from Ringo and was also released in a deluxe edition that contains a wonderful DVD with the videos for "Sentimental Journey," "It Don't Come Easy," "Back Off Boogaloo," "You're Sixteen," "Only You (And You Alone)" (which also features Harry Nilsson), and "Act Naturally," along with an ad for Goodnight Vienna.] ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Photograph: The Very Best Of Ringo

Monday, July 10, 2017

Ringo Starr - Sentimental Journey

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:32
Size: 76.8 MB
Styles: Contemporary Pop/Rock
Year: 1970/1995
Art: Front

[3:24] 1. Sentimental Journey
[2:24] 2. Night And Day
[2:35] 3. Whispering Grass
[2:10] 4. Bye Bye Blackbird
[2:38] 5. I'm A Fool To Care
[3:20] 6. Stardust
[3:17] 7. Blue Turning Grey Over You
[3:04] 8. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
[2:40] 9. Dream
[2:18] 10. You Always Hurt The One You Love
[2:42] 11. Have I Told You Lately That I Love You
[2:54] 12. Let The Rest Of The World Go By

Cut as the Beatles were disintegrating and released shortly before the group's final album, Let It Be, Ringo Starr's debut solo album was a collection of pre-rock standards dating from the 1920s to the '50s, sung over orchestral tracks arranged by everyone from fellow Beatle Paul McCartney and Bee Gee Maurice Gibb to jazz veterans Quincy Jones and Oliver Nelson. Starr brought a good-natured, nearly humorous tone to his vocals, perhaps because he wasn't trying to compete with the classic pop stylists most identified with these songs, but only to express his nostalgic affection for the material. Coming more than a decade before the fad for standards albums by rock-era pop stars like Linda Ronstadt, the album was taken not as a career move, but as a highly eccentric and expensive novelty of a kind only Beatles could afford to indulge. In retrospect, it remains harmlessly charming, if unexceptional. (Originally released in the U.K. on March 27, 1970, as Parlophone 7101 and in the U.S. on April 24, 1970, as Apple 3365, Sentimental Journey was reissued in the U.S. on August 29, 1995, as Captiol 98615.) ~William Ruhlmann

Sentimental Journey

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