NEWS

New album releases, week of 8-2-2005

Written by Al Barger
Published August 02, 2005
Part of New CDs

June Carter and Johnny Cash each have new multi-disc anthologies this week, Keep on the Sunny Side: June Carter Cash - Her Life in Music and The Legend tespectively. Start with June's two CD set. It's a beauty. See full review.

Johnny's four CD set seems to have all the hits, and is comprehensive of everything except his American recordings. It may be the best place to start if you for some odd reason do not own any Johnny Cash records. And what's with you non-Johnny owning people anyway, are you communists or what? Still, you probably have some Johnny, but no June. Fix that now.

My beloved Alice Cooper has a new album this week, Dirty Diamonds. I'm not really expecting much from Alice at this point, but maybe he'll surprise us with a late career renaissance.

When I think of a stupid drunk whining bitch in some country bar who wouldn't know real country music if it bit her in the ass, boo-hooing about some ex, I naturally think of Faith Hill. If I'm describing you, you may wish to check out her new Fireflies album. I'm sure you'll think it's the berries.

There's a Public Enemy hits album, but it's only 10 songs, three of which are from the classic Fear of a Black Planet. You'd probably be better to just buy that instead, with used copies on Amazon as cheap as $3.50.

Here's the complete list of this week's major new releases, courtesy AMG:

June Carter Cash Keep on the Sunny Side: June Carter Cash - Her Life in Music Sony
Country-Folk, Traditional Country

Johnny Cash The Legend Columbia/Legacy
Country Gospel, Rockabilly, Country-Pop, Cowboy, Traditional Country, Rock & Roll

Faith Hill Fireflies Warner Bros.
Contemporary Country, Country-Pop, Adult Contemporary

Michael Penn Mr. Hollywood, Jr. 1947 Spin Art
Singer/Songwriter, Pop Underground, Adult Alternative Pop/Rock

Amadou & Mariam Dimanche a Bamako Nonesuch
Afro-Pop, Worldbeat

Piotr Anderszewski Karol Szymanowski: Piano Sonata No. 3; Metopes; Masques Virgin Classics
Modern Piano Music

Natasha Bedingfield Unwritten [DualDisc] Sony
Dance-Pop

Douglas Boyd Mahler: Symphony No. 4 (Chamber Version) Avie
Post-Romantic Orchestral Music

John Coltrane The Bethlehem Years Bethlehem Archives
Hard Bop, Experimental Big Band

Sarah Connor Naughty But Nice Epic
Club/Dance, Contemporary R&B

Cook, Dixon & Young Volume 1 RCA
Musical Theater, Vocal Jazz, American Popular Song

Alice Cooper Dirty Diamonds New West
Hard Rock, Heavy Metal

Paquito D'Rivera La Habana: Rio Conexion Rounder
Afro-Cuban Jazz, Latin Jazz, Bop, Cuban Jazz

Deadman Our Eternal Ghosts One Little Indian Us
Adult Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative Pop/Rock

Dungen Ta Det Lugnt [US Bonus Disc] Subliminal Sounds
Foreign Language Rock, Neo-Psychedelia, Indie Rock

Electric Light Orchestra All Over the World: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra Epic
Album Rock, Pop/Rock, Prog-Rock/Art Rock

Duke Ellington Duke Ellington Presents Rhino
Swing, Big Band

The Everly Brothers Roots Collectors' Choice Music
Close Harmony, Country-Rock, Folk-Rock

The Everly Brothers Sing Great Country Hits [Bonus Tracks] Collectors' Choice Music
Close Harmony, Rock & Roll, Country-Rock, Pop/Rock

The Everly Brothers Two Yanks in England Collectors' Choice Music
Close Harmony, Pop/Rock, Rock & Roll

Michael Franti/Spearhead Love Kamikaze: The Lost Sex Singles & Collectors' Remixes Liberation
Smooth Soul, Underground Rap, Contemporary R&B, Alternative Rap

Gonzales Solo Piano Universal
Classical

The Greenhornes East Grand Blues V2
Garage Punk, Indie Rock, Garage Rock Revival

Richard Hell Spurts: The Best of Richard Hell Rhino
American Punk, New York Punk, Punk

Gustav Leonhardt William Byrd Alpha Productions
Renaissance Keyboard Music

Teairra Mari Roc-A-Fella Records Presents Teairra Marí Roc-A-Fella
Urban

Charles Mingus East Coasting [Bonus Tracks] Shout Factory
Hard Bop, Post-Bop, Avant-Garde

Wes Montgomery Best Of [Blue Note] Blue Note
Hard Bop

Original Soundtrack Broken Flowers Decca
Soundtracks

Greg Osby Channel Three Blue Note
Post-Bop

Hille Perl The Star and the Sea: Music for Viola da Gamba and Lute by Lee Santana Carpe Diem
Contemporary Chamber Music

Tristan Prettyman Twentythree [DualDisc] Virgin
Adult Alternative Pop/Rock

The Prom Kings The Prom Kings Geffen
Post-Grunge

Public Enemy Power to the People and the Beats: Public Enemy's Greatest Hits Def Jam
Golden Age, Political Rap, Hardcore Rap, East Coast Rap, Hip-Hop

Shel Silverstein The Best of Shel Silverstein Sony
Children's Folk, Folksongs, Musical Comedy, Contemporary Folk, Novelty, Progressive Country

Lonnie Smith Think! Blue Note
Jazz Blues, Soul-Jazz, Jazz-Funk

Various Artists Laszlo Vidovsky: Zwolf Streichquartette; Twelve Duos Budapest Music
Contemporary Chamber Music

Violent Femmes BBC Live Hux
College Rock, Post-Punk, New Wave, Alternative Pop/Rock

Vitalic OK Cowboy Pias
Electro-Techno, Techno

Abigail Washburn Song of the Traveling Daughter Nettwerk
Neo-Traditional Folk

Unreformed hawkish Hoosier hillbilly and sometimes candidate Al Barger runs the still squeezin' down the psychodelic Kentucky moonshine at MoreThings.com, what with the paranoid religious visions and the Pentacostal music and visions of God and anarchy running amok and such. Somebody oughta call the cops to report his out of control freedom of conscience. Till they come to take him away somewhere where he can't hurt anyone else, you can check out his weekly column of NEW ALBUM RELEASES.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
New album releases, week of 8-2-2005
Published: August 02, 2005
Type: News
Section: Music
Part of a feature: New CDs
Writer: Al Barger
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Comments

#1 — August 2, 2005 @ 02:07AM — Aaman [URL]

The Gustav Leonhardt - William Byrd sounds very interesting - 16th century composers are not common, methinks

Love yr Faith Hill opinion - heh

#2 — August 2, 2005 @ 02:11AM — Al Barger [URL]

Thanks Aaman, just trying to keep it real vis a vis Faith Hill. I mean, I got a 20 for her, but it sure wouldn't be for one of her crappy records.

#3 — August 2, 2005 @ 02:12AM — Aaman [URL]

That reminds me of the song by "Pray For the Soul Of Betty", "Truck Stop Sally" - you should check out the band - features Constantine Maroulis of Idol near-fame

#4 — August 2, 2005 @ 02:35AM — Tan The Man [URL]

Well, this new Faith Hill record is supposed to more country than her previous albums. I think it won't be bad, but it might not be that good either.

#5 — August 2, 2005 @ 02:37AM — Al Barger [URL]

And while Truckstop Sally Hill is earning her 20, we could listen to some real music- KD Lang, perhaps.

#6 — August 2, 2005 @ 02:40AM — Al Barger [URL]

Tan, Faith Hill's album might be good- if it's a copy of the June Carter collection that she's just purchased at the store. Again, this would be good to listen to while she plies her natural trade.

#7 — August 2, 2005 @ 02:56AM — Tan The Man [URL]

Hah.

#8 — August 2, 2005 @ 14:23PM — todd [URL]

Leave Faith Hill alone! She's soft and warm and special and pretty and, aw shucks.

All kidding aside, I have heard lots worse Pop country.

She at least got her start the kinda right way: working as a waitress and playing the Bluebird at night, where she was discovered. So the story goes.

#9 — August 2, 2005 @ 14:35PM — Aaman [URL]

Must've made a lot of 20s

#10 — August 2, 2005 @ 16:49PM — visualsimplicity [URL]

I recommend Natasha Bedingfield's Unwritten for this weeks release. Good stuff imported from the good ol' UK.

#11 — August 2, 2005 @ 20:32PM — godoggo

There was lots and lots of beautiful music written during the Renaissance. Byrd was I guess the major British composer during the period, although German and Italy and I guess maybe France was where it was all happening.

I've found you pretty much can't go wrong with Renaissance choral music; the intrumental stuff I've heard seems limited by the primitive instruments of the time; I'm not even sure I've heard any keyboard music of the period.

#12 — August 2, 2005 @ 20:43PM — gonzo marx

Mingus and Alice....sweet

the rest i either have in other forms (the Ellington and PE), or could care less..

thanx fer the list, big Al...did ya ever listen to the Tool i sent ya?

Excelsior!

#13 — August 18, 2005 @ 20:34PM — Thom White

If you want to hear a great freaking album check out rock legend Alice Cooper's new album. Very old school, I love it.

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