[size=200][b][color=red][i]Ry Cooder Crossroads[/i]
Label : Warner
Released : 1986
Format : Flac
[/color][/b][/size]
[img]http://c3.cduniverse.ws/MuzeAudioArt/Large/89/93989.jpg[/img]
[size=150][color=orangered]The ersatz blues story of the film gives Ry Cooder leeway to turn in an impressive blues-derived soundtrack featuring Sonny Terry along with his usual collaborators Van Dyke Parks, Jim Keltner, Nathan East, and others. But it's Cooder's guitar playing that highlights the album.[/color][/size]
[size=150][b][color=red]Tracklist:[/color][/b]
01. Crossroads
02. Down In Mississippi
03. Cotton Needs Pickin'
04. Viola Lee Blues
05. See You In Hell, Blind Boy
06. Nitty Gritty Mississippi
07. He Made A Woman Out Of Me
08. Feelin' Bad Blues
09. Somebody's Callin' My Name
10. Willie Brown Blues
11. Walkin' Away Blues[/size]
[size=150][b][color=red]Personnel:[/color][/b]
Ry Cooder (vocals, guitar, mandolin)
Jim Dickinson (vocals, guitar, piano, organ)
Frank Frost (vocals, harmonica)
Willie Green, Jr., Bobby King (vocals, background vocals)
Joe Seneca, Amy Madigan, Sam King, Arnold McCuller (vocals)
Otis Taylor (guitar)
Kirby Johnson (strings)
John "Juke" Logan, Sonny Terry, Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee (harmonica); Walt Sereth (soprano saxophone)
George Bohannon (horns, baritone horn)
Van Dyke Parks (piano)
William D. "Smitty" Smith (organ)
Alan Pasqua (synthesizer)
John Price, Jim Keltner (drums)
Miguel Cruz (percussion)
Terry Evans (background vocals). [/size]
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Ry Cooder Crossroads(blues)(flac)[rogercc][h33t]
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Ry Cooder-Election Special (2012) 320Kbit(mp3) DMT
[b]Ry Cooder-Election Special (2012) 320Kbit(mp3) DMT[/b]
Verenigde Staten
Roots / Rock
Label: Nonesuch
[url]http://www.nonesuch.com/artists/ry-cooder[/url]
[b]Election Special (2012)[/b]
[img]http://img267.imageshack.us/img267/1926/78412891.jpg[/img]
[url]http://www.musicmeter.nl/album/256948[/url]
Het nieuwe album van Ry Cooder!!
[color=blue]Tracks:[/color]
1. Mutt Romney Blues
2. Brother is Gone
3. The Wall Street Part of Town
4. Guantanamo
5. Cold Cold Feeling
6. Going to Tampa
7. Kool-Aid
8. The 90 and the 9
9. Take Your Hands Off It
[b]Deze review wordt u aangeboden door:
DUTCH MOVIE THEATER[/b]
[img]http://img823.imageshack.us/img823/3093/dmtv.png[/img]
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Ry Cooder Ry Cooder (rock)(mp3@320)[rogercc][h33t]
[size=250][i][b][color=red]Ry Cooder Ry Cooder[/color][/b][/i][/size]
[size=200][color=tomato]Released: December 1970
Label: Reprise
Format : Flac[/color][/size]
[img]http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51tsykPJnsL._SS500_.jpg[/img]
[size=150][color=orangered]A sonic chameleon of sorts, Ry Cooder has always been on the forefront of popular music. Whether as a session musician (with the Rolling Stones, Randy Newman, and others) or a film-score composer (most notably in collaboration with director Wim Wenders), Cooder has succeeded in incorporating diverse styles of music into his personal sound. This self-titled 1970 release features Cooder in a blues-rock mode that also touches on a wide range of musical influences.
"Police Dog Blues" and "Dark Is the Night" are straight-up blues numbers that feature Cooder's incredible slide-guitar playing. "Pigmeat," however, finds Cooder in a different setting, exploring gritty Dixieland music. "Do Re Mi" and "My Old Kentucky Home (Turpentine & Dandelion Wine)" move in yet another direction, easing into a funky, lazy groove reminiscent of the Band's Music From Big Pink. On several tracks, Cooder is supported by the unique orchestral arrangements of Kirby Johnson, which add color and texture to this excellent outing. [/color][/size]
[size=150][color=deepskyblue]Ry Cooder, born in Los Angeles in 1947, is a guitarist, composer and producer, though he gained his world-wide reputation primarily as a Slide-Guitarist.He played in Captain Beefheart's Magic Band, and has also accompanied such artists as Gordon Lightfoot, the Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, Randy Newman, John Lee Hooker and many others.
Although influenced early on by blues, he became a pioneer in resurrecting the traditions of "World Music," a concept that was entirely new at the time. He devoted himself to Country and Folk music, Cuban, Hawaiian music, Gospel, Jazz, Ragtime and Vaudeville.
Ry Cooder has composed soundtracks for more than twenty films, among them Wim Wenders'"Paris, Texas", and "The End of Violence[/color][/size]
[img]http://www.decca.com/file/RyCooder.jpg_4bdbf24e953e7-artistImage.jpg[/img]
[size=150][b][color=red]Tracklist ;[/color][/b]
1. Alimony - 2:11
2. France Chance - 2:45
3. One Meat Ball - 2:27
4. Do Re Mi - 3:03
5. Old Kentucky Home - 1:45
6. How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live? - 2:45
7. Available Space - 2:11
8. Pig Meat - 3:07
9. Police Dog Blues - 2:43
10. Goin' To Brownsville - 2:43
11. Dark Is The Night - 2:48[/size]
[size=150][b][color=red]Personnel:[/color][/b]
Ry Cooder (vocals, guitar, mandolin)
Gloria Jones (vocals, background vocals)
Chris Ethridge, Max Bennett, Roy Estrada (bass )
John Barbata (drums)
Bobby Bruce (violin)
Van Dyke Parks (piano, keyboards)
Richie Hayward (drums)
Milt Holland (percussion).[/size]
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Ry Cooder Paradise And Lunch(rock)(mp3@320)[rogercc][h33t]
[size=250][b][i][color=red]Ry Cooder Paradise and Lunch[/color][/i][/b][/size]
[size=200][b][color=orangered]Released : May 1974
Label : Reprise
Format : Mp3@320[/color][/b][/size]
[img]http://c3.cduniverse.ws/PhantomArt/Large/07/155807.jpg[/img]
[size=150][color=blue]Ry Cooder understands that a great song is a great song, whether it was written before the Depression or last week. Still, at the same time he isn't afraid to explore new avenues and possibilities for the material. Like his three previous records, Paradise and Lunch is filled with treasures which become part of a world where eras and styles converge without ever sounding forced or contrived. One may think that an album that contains a traditional railroad song, tunes by assorted blues greats, and a Negro spiritual alongside selections by the likes of Bobby Womack, Burt Bacharach, and Little Milton may lack cohesiveness or merely come across as a history lesson, but to Cooder this music is all part of the same fabric and is as relevant and accessible as anything else that may be happening at the time. No matter when it was written or how it may have been done in the past, the tracks, led by Cooder's brilliant guitar, are taken to new territory where they can coexist. It's as if Washington Phillips'"Tattler" could have shared a place on the charts with Womack's "It's All Over Now" or Little Milton's "If Walls Could Talk." That he's successful on these, as well as the Salvation Army march of "Jesus on the Mainline" or the funky, gospel feel of Blind Willie McTell's "Married Man's a Fool," is not only a credit to Cooder's talent and ingenuity as an arranger and bandleader, but also to the songs themselves. The album closes with its most stripped-down track, an acoustic guitar and piano duet with jazz legend Earl "Fatha" Hines on the Blind Blake classic "Ditty Wah Ditty." Here both musicians are given plenty of room to showcase their instrumental prowess, and the results are nothing short of stunning. Eclectic, intelligent, and thoroughly entertaining, Paradise and Lunch remains Ry Cooder's masterpiece[/color][/size]
[size=150][b][color=red]Tracklist[/color][/b]
1. "Tamp 'Em Up Solid"– 3:19
2. "Tattler"– 4:14
3. "Married Man's a Fool"– 3:10
4. "Jesus on the Mainline"– 4:09
5. "It's All Over Now"– 4:49
6. "Fool for a Cigarette/Feelin' Good"– 4:25
7. "If Walls Could Talk"– 3:12
8. "Mexican Divorce"– 3:51
9. "Ditty Wah Ditty"– 5:42[/size]
[img]http://userserve-ak.last.fm/serve/_/27586687/Ry+Cooder+rc.png[/img]
[size=150][b][color=red]Personnel[/color][/b]
Ry Cooder vocals, guitar
Milt Holland – drums, percussion
Jim Keltner – drums
Russ Titelman, Chris Etheridge – electric bass
Ronnie Barron – piano, organ
Red Callender, John Duke – bass
Plas Johnson – alto saxophone
Oscar Brashear – cornet
Bobby King, Gene Mumford, Bill Johnson, George McCurn, Walter Cook, Richard Jones, Russ Titelman, Karl Russell – voices
Earl Hines - piano on "Ditty Wah Ditty"[/size]
[img]http://www.audio-music.info/pic/Cooder_Ry.jpg[/img]
[size=150][color=tomato]Ryland “Ry” Peter Cooder (b. 1947) is a guitarist, singer and composer from the United States. Ry is known mostly for his brilliant slide guitar work, his passion for American roots music, and for his collaborations with The Rolling Stones as well as many other musicians from countries all around the world.[/color][/size]
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Performance Soundtrack (Ry Cooder, Randy Newman, Mick Jagger, Ja
Performance Soundtrack (Ry Cooder, Randy Newman, Mick Jagger, Jack Nitzsche)
http://www.amazon.com/Performance-1970-Film-Jack-Nitzsche/dp/B000002LN5/ref=pd_rhf_ee_p_t_1
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Ry Cooder - The Ry Cooder Anthology: The UFO Has Landed [2 CD] [2008]
Visionary, Grammy-winning guitar legend, composer, and producer Ry Cooder's epic musical journey has explored the realms of rock, blues, country, folk, Hawaiian, Latin, Tuvan throat singing, jazz, and Tex-Mex-to name a few. On 'The UFO Has Landed', Rhino celebrates four decades of his eclectic output with a 2-CD 34 track collection of his work as a solo artist, collaborator, and soundtrack composer. Spanning 38 years- from Cooder's self titled 1970 debut to his 2008 album 'I, Flathead'- the anthology includes his most memorable selections as well as one previously unreleased track.
Release:_______________________October 28, 2008
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The Very Best Of Ry Cooder-River Rescue CD Rip-MP3 {TJ}
[center][color=blue][b]The Very Best Of Ry Cooder-River Rescue[/b][/color][/center]
[center][img]http://i1304.photobucket.com/albums/s534/whiteyboy1/RyCooder_RR_zps0d1d9858.jpg[/img][/center]
Released: 1994 Genre: Rock
Track List:
01: River Come Down (Pka Bamboo) (4:14)
02: UFO Has Landed in the Ghetto (5:01)
03: Low-Commotion (3:10)
04: Smack Dab in the Middle (3:19)
05: Tattler (4:19)
06: Dark End of the Street (3:26)
07: The Very Thing That Makes You Rich (Makes Me Poor) (5:31)
08: Going Back to Okinawa (4:42)
09: Money Honey (3:29)
10: Why Don't You Try Me (4:55)
11: Paris, Texas (2:56)
12: Chloe (3:02)
13: The Pearls/Tia Juana (4:20)
14: I Think It's Going to Work Out Fine (4:45)
15: Down in Hollywood (4:18)
16: Which Came First (3:46)
17: Crazy 'Bout an Automobile (Every Woman I Know) (5:04)
18: Get Rhythm (3:17)
19: Little Sister (3:47)
Tech Info:
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 190kbps
Sample Rate: 44.1KHz
Sample Size: 16 Bit
Channels: 2 (Stereo)
Encode Mode: VBR
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The Chieftains Feat. Ry Cooder - San Patricio (2010)
The Chieftains Feat. Ry Cooder - San Patricio (2010)
256 vbr mp3 | 85 MB
The musical souls of two nations, Ireland and Mexico, are movingly brought to life in San Patricio, the latest international collaboration by six-time Grammy winners The Chieftains - the leading practitioners of Irish traditional music for the past four decades.
The album features multi-instrumentalist, singer and composer Ry Cooder, another multiple-Grammy winner, who co-produced with The Chieftains' Paddy Moloney. It tells the nearly forgotten story of the brave San Patricio battalion - a downtrodden group of Irish immigrant conscripts who deserted the U.S. Army in 1846 to fight on the Mexican side against the invading Yankees in the Mexican-American War (1846-1848).
BBC Review:
"In equal measure a curio, a lament, a history lesson and a hoedown, San Patricio is one of those albums that happily transcends its parts. If you only buy one Irish-Mexican album this year, in fact, The Chieftains and Ry Cooder should do you nicely.
The Californian guitarist and the Irish folk heavyweights are seasoned collaborators as well as inveterate globetrotters. It was while they were recording together in Havana in the 1990s that the Irishmen introduced Cooder to the musicians who would star in his nostalgic world music bestseller, the Buena Vista Social Club.
This time, though, the focus is on another historical gem: the little-known story of the Irish conscripts who deserted from the American army to fight with Santa Anna’s Mexicans in the 1840s border war. And while the first hearing of tin whistles with Mexican guitars is a little disorienting, Chieftains founder Paddy Moloney brews up a winning mixture.
Bumping cheeky mariachis up against Celtic ballads, and abutting the warm warble of Cooder’s tenor with the stately harmonies of Los Cenzontles, the stellar cast includes Linda Ronstadt (with a song learned from her Mexican grandfather), legendary arranger Van Dyke Parks, the sensational Mexican singer Lila Downs, Moya Brennan from Clannad, and battalions of crack instrumentalists.
Among the highlights are the ribald capering of Latin Grammy winners Los Tigres del Norte, and the mournful, sashaying bolero sung by 90-year-old Chavela Vargas. And if the production doesn’t attain the all-embracing smoky ambience of the Buena Vista record, it fiercely affirms that – Guinness or tequila – these are two musical cultures that know how to party.
It’s a coming thing, too, this business of music as narrative documentary. Moloney first tried it in the 1970s, addressing matters Irish-French on the 15-minute Bonaparte’s Retreat. At an hour, though, the Irish-Mexican theme could frankly do with more storytelling; Liam Neeson’s effective but brief reading, March to Battle, is no substitute for the sort of explanation Cooder superbly wove into his earlier Chavez Ravine.
Still, this is a transatlantic musical campaign whose virtuosity, verve and sheer eccentric heart make it hard to resist."
Tracklist:
1. La Iguana - With Lila Downs
2. La Golondrina - With Los Folkloristas
3. A La Orilla De Un Palmar - With Linda Ronstadt
4. Danza De Concheros - With Los Folkloristas
5. El Chivo - With Los Cenzontles
6. San Campio - With Carlos Nunez
7. The Sands Of Mexico - With Ry Cooder
8. Sailing To Mexico - With Carlos Nunez
9. El Caballo - With Los Camperos De Valles
10. March To Battle (Across The Rio Grande) - With Banda De Gaita De Batallon, Liam Neeson, Los Cenzontles And L.A. Juvenil
11. Lullaby For The Dead - With Moya Brennan
12. Luz De Luna - With Chavela Vargas
13. Persecucion De Villa - With Mariachi Santa Fe De Jesus (Chuy) Guzman
14. Cancion Mixteca (Intro) - With Ry Cooder
15. Cancion Mixteca - With Los Tigres Del Norte
16. Ojitos Negros - With Los Cenzontles
17. El Relampago - With Lila Downs
18. El Pajaro Cu - With La Negra Graciana
19. Finale - With Los Cenzontles, Carlos Nunez, Los Folkloristas, Banda De Gaita De Batallon And L.A. Juvenil
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Ry Cooder - Very Best Greatest Hits [Bubanee]
This Music Has The 3 Ninja's Approval
For QUALITY NEEDS Visit
http://www.bubaneemusic.com/
Quality..............: MP3 VBRV0
Source...............: CD
Information..........: Playlist - Art In Songs
Tags.................: ID3 v2.3
Posted/Ripped by.....: Bubanee
---------------------------------------------------------------------
You Only Get Quality Here - Proper MP3
---------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Ry Cooder - River Come Down (Pka Bamboo) [04:14]
2. Ry Cooder - UFO Has Landed in the Ghetto [05:01]
3. Ry Cooder - Low-Commotion [03:10]
4. Ry Cooder - Smack Dab in the Middle [03:19]
5. Ry Cooder - Tattler [04:19]
6. Ry Cooder - Dark End of the Street [03:26]
7. Ry Cooder - The Very Thing That Makes You Rich (Makes Me Poor)[05:31]
8. Ry Cooder - Going Back to Okinawa [04:42]
9. Ry Cooder - Money Honey [03:29]
10. Ry Cooder - Why Don't You Try Me [04:55]
11. Ry Cooder - Paris, Texas [02:56]
12. Ry Cooder - Chloe [03:02]
13. Ry Cooder - The Pearls/Tia Juana [04:20]
14. Ry Cooder - I Think It's Going to Work Out Fine [04:45]
15. Ry Cooder - Down in Hollywood [04:18]
16. Ry Cooder - Which Came First [03:46]
17. Ry Cooder - Crazy 'Bout an Automobile (Every Woman I Know)[05:04]
18. Ry Cooder - Get Rhythm [03:17]
19. Ry Cooder - Little Sister [03:47]
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Ry Cooder...Chavez Ravine(2005)[FLAC]
Chávez Ravine: A Record by Ry Cooder is a concept album and historical album by Ry Cooder which tells the story of Chávez Ravine, a Mexican-American community demolished in the 1950s in order to build public housing. The housing was never built. Ultimately the Brooklyn Dodgers built a stadium on the site as part of their move to Los Angeles.
Chávez Ravine received a Grammy nomination for "Best Contemporary Folk Album" in 2006.
Released June 7, 2005
Recorded Village Recorders, Sound City Studios
Label Nonesuch
Producer Ry Cooder
1. Poor Man's Shangri-La 5:25
2. Onda Callejera 3:50
3. Don't Call Me Red 4:58
4. Corrido de Boxeo 3:21
5. Muy Fifi 4:03
6. Los Chucos Suaves 3:08
7. Chinito Chinito 4:52
8. 3 Cool Cats 2:57
9. El U.F.O. Cayo 8:22
10. It's Just Work for Me 5:54
11. In My Town 5:40
12. Ejercito Militar 3:16
13. Barrio Viejo 4:42
14. 3rd Base, Dodger Stadium 5:45
15. Soy Luz y Sombra 3:12
cd ripped by dBpoweramp
please seed
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The-Chieftains-featuring-Ry-Cooder--San-Patricio(2010)[FLAC]
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Vishwa Mohan Bhatt & Ry Cooder - A Meeting By The River (1993)
Vishwa Mohan Bhatt & Ry Cooder - A Meeting By The River (1993) - FLAC
01 A Meeting By The River
02 Longing
03 Ganges Delta Blues
04 Isa Lei
(acoustic audiophile recording)
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Ry Cooder - Into The Purple Valley 1972 [EAC - FLAC] (oan)
http://leetleech.org/images/77552739651801028001.jpg
Ry Cooder - Into The Purple Valley 1972 [EAC - FLAC] (oan)
Into the Purple Valley is the second album by roots rock legend Ry Cooder, Recorded 1971 ~ Released February 1972
Ryland "Ry" Peter Cooder [born 15 March 1947] is a US guitarist, singer and composer.
He is known for his slide guitar work, his interest in blues-rock, roots music from his native
North America, and, more recently, for his collaborations with traditional musicians from
many countries.
Cooder's solo work has been an eclectic mix, taking in dust bowl folk, blues, Tex-Mex, soul,
gospel, rock, and much else. He has collaborated with many important musicians, including
The Rolling Stones, Van Morrison, Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Earl Hines, Little Feat,
Captain Beefheart, The Chieftains, John Lee Hooker, Pops, Mavis Staples, Gabby Pahinui,
Flaco Jimenez, Ibrahim Ferrer [Buena Vista Social Club], Freddy Fender and Ali Farka
Toure. He formed the Little Village supergroup with Nick Lowe, John Hiatt, and Jim Keltner.
Cooder was ranked 8th on Rolling Stone magazine's list of "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of
All Time." A 2010 ranking by Gibson placed him at @32.
1970s
Throughout the 1970s, Cooder released a series of Warner Bros. Records albums that
showcased his guitar work. Cooder, like a musicologist or treasure hunter, explored bygone
musical genres and found great old~time recordings which he then, as a musician,
personalized with sensitive, updated reworkings. Thus, on his breakthrough album, Into the
Purple Valley, he chose unusual instrumentations and performed his own arrangements of
old Black blues and gospel songs, a Calypso, white country music songs [giving a tempo
change to the cowboy ballad, "Billy the Kid"], and ~ to open the album ~ a protest song,
"How Can You Keep on Moving [Unless You Migrate Too]" by Agnes "Sis" Cunningham
about the Okies who were not welcomed with open arms when they migrated to escape the
Dust Bowl in the 1930s ~ to which he gave a rousing-yet-satirical march accompaniment.
Cooder's later '70s albums [with the exception of Jazz] do not fall under a single genre
description, but ~ to generalize broadly ~ it might be fair to call Cooder's self titled first album
blues; Into the Purple Valley, Boomer's Story, and Paradise and Lunch, folk and blues;
Chicken Skin Music and Showtime, a unique melange of Tex-Mex and Hawaiian; Jazz,
1920s jazz; Bop Till You Drop, '50's R&B; and Borderline and Get Rhythm, eclectic
rock~based excursions.Cooder's 1979 album Bop Till You Drop was the first popular music
album to be recorded digitally. It yielded his biggest hit, an R&B cover version of Elvis
Presley's 1960s recording "Little Sister". Ry Cooder is credited on Van Morrison's 1979
album, Into the Music, for slide guitar on the song "Full Force Gale".
01. "How Can You Keep Moving[Unless You Migrate Too][Agnes "Sis" Cunningham] ~ 2:25
02. "Billy the Kid" [Traditional] ~ 3:45
03. "Money Honey" [Jesse Stone] ~ 3:28
04. "FDR in Trinidad" [Fitz Maclean] ~ 3:01
05. "Teardrops Will Fall" [Dickey Doo, Marion Smith] ~ 3:03
06. "Denomination Blues" [George Washington Phillips] ~ 3:58
07. "On a Monday" [Leadbelly] ~ 2:52
08. "Hey Porter" [Johnny Cash] ~~ 4:34
09. "Great Dream from Heaven" [Joseph Spence] ~ 1:53
10. "Taxes on the Farmer Feeds Us All" [Traditional] ~ 3:52
11. "Vigilante Man" [Woody Guthrie] ~ 4:15
Playing Time.........: 00:37:46
Total Size...........: 193.09 MB
http://img63.imageshack.us/img63/989/37963846.gif
http://www.discogs.com/Ry-Cooder-Into-The-Purple-Valley/release/1103763
http://img337.imageshack.us/img337/6758/included1.png
http://img214.imageshack.us/img214/366/included2.png
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/1495/included3.png
All tracks accurately ripped
No errors occurred
End of status report
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Ry Cooder - The Long Riders
Ry Cooder - The Long Riders (1980)
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Ry Cooder - Borderline [1980] [Robbie60] [FLAC] [EAC]
Ry Cooder
Borderline
Label: Warner Bros
Released: 1980
Source: Original CD
Size Torrent: 234 MB
Format: FLAC
With 1980's Borderline, Ry Cooder followed the foray into R&B and soul of his previous effort, Bop Till You Drop, but this time out with a little shot of the Southwest thrown in. At the same time, he also continues the primarily electric sound of that record. As far as his selection of material goes, Borderline may sometimes lack the surprising, esoteric charm of his earlier recordings, but there are still some terrific finds, including the Tex-Mex-flavored "The Girls from Texas," which may be the album's finest moment. Other highlights include one of John Hiatt's best, the written-to-order "The Way We Make a Broken Heart," as well as Billy "The Kid" Emerson's "Crazy 'Bout an Automobile," which Cooder had been performing live for a number of years, and the soulful Maurice & Mac treasure "Why Don't You Try Me." And while it's moments like these that help make Cooder's records special, he also takes on some better-known '50s and '60s offerings with moderate success. His recording of Wilson Pickett's 1966 hit "634-5789" isn't going to make anyone forget the original, but he's able to pull it off as a rocker, while "Speedo" and "Down in the Boondocks" are respectable covers. Borderline may not have the singular personality of his best '70s work, but it's a solid outing nonetheless.
Recorded at Warner Bros. Recording Studio, Burbank, California.
Personnel
Ry Cooder ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ guitar, vibes, vocals
Jim Keltner ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ drums
George "Baboo" Pierre ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ percussion
Tim Drummond ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ bass
Reggie McBride ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ bass
William D. Smith ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ piano, organ, vocals
John Hiatt ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ guitar, vocals
Jesse Harms ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ synthesizer
Bobby King ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ vocals
Willie Green Jr. ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ vocals
Track Listing
01."634-5789" (Steve Cropper, Eddie Floyd) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 2:56
02."Speedo" (Esther Navarro) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 3:20
03."Why Don't You Try Me" (Billy Young) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 4:54
04."Down In The Boondocks" (Joe South) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 3:21
05."Johnny Porter" (Bobby Ray Appleberry) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 5:21
06."The Way We Make A Broken Heart" (John Hiatt) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 4:28
07."Crazy 'Bout An Automobile" (Billy Emerson) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 5:03
08."The Girls From Texas" (Cliff Chambers, Jimmy Holiday, James Lewis) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 4:40
09."Borderline" (Ry Cooder) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 3:19
10."Never Make Your Move Too Soon" (Stix Hooper, Will Jennings) ΓΓé¼ΓÇ£ 6:08
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Ry Cooder & Manuel Galban - Mambo Sinuendo [2003] [Robbie60] [
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Ry Cooder - Chicken Skin Music [1976] [Robbie60] [FLAC]
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Ry Cooder - Paradise And Lunch [1974] [Robbie60] [FLAC]
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Ry Cooder - Get Rhythm [1987] [Robbie60] [FLAC] [EAC]
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Rising Sons - Feat. Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder (1964) mp3@192kbps {1337x} kawli
<p><img class="descrimg" src="http://leetleech.org/images/68255994815948126262.jpg"><br />
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Rising Sons was a Los Angeles, California-based band founded in 1964. No one knew quite what to make of this L.A. band in the mid-'60s, who unbelievably included Ry Cooder, Taj Mahal, Kevin Kelley (later in the Byrds), and even Ed Cassidy (Sprirt) in the same lineup. The group was signed to Columbia Records but their album was not issued at the time. One single, "Candy Man"/"The Devil's Got My Woman", did surface, but the group disbanded in 1966. Their recorded material was eventually released under the title Rising Sons Featuring Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder in 1992.<br />
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Taj Mahal became a prominent blues/folk performer and Cooder made his name playing sessions and later recorded successfully under his own name. Cassidy founded the band Spirit and Kelley became a member of his cousin Chris Hillman's band the Byrds in 1968, and played on their seminal Sweetheart of the Rodeo album. Rising Sons' bluesy/folksy sound anticipated future recordings by groups like Moby Grape, Buffalo Springfield, the Grateful Dead, and The Byrds. The session became widely bootlegged and nearly three decades later was finally given an official release by Columbia Records.<br />
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Their lone single and unreleased album form the core of this 22-track reissue, which features imaginative rearrangements of standards like "Corrine, Corrina," an obscure Dylan cover ("Walkin' Down the Line"), rocking originals, a confident performance of Goffin/King's "Take a Giant Step" (later Mahal's signature tune), and some sweet guitar interplay between Mahal and Cooder throughout. This archival release has value above and beyond historical interest.<br />
(info source: excerpts from AllMusic and wikipedia)<br />
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Personnel:<br />
* Taj Mahal- vocals, harmonica, guitar, piano<br />
* Ry Cooder- vocals, six and 12-string guitar, mandolin, slide guitar, dobro)<br />
* Kevin Kelley- vocals, guitar, drums<br />
* Gary Marker- bass<br />
* Jesse Lee Kincaid- vocals, guitar<br />
* Ed Cassidy- drums<br />
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Tracklist:<br />
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01. Statesboro Blues - Blind Willie McTell (2:23)<br />
02. If the River Was Whiskey (Divin' Duck Blues) - Sleepy John Estes (2:41)<br />
03. By and By (Poor Me) - Charlie Patton (3:31)<br />
04. Candy Man - Reverend Gary Davis (2:04)<br />
05. 2:10 Train - Albertano (4:09)<br />
06. Let the Good Times Roll - Goodman, Johnson, King, Lee, Martin… (2:43)<br />
07. 44 Blues - Memphis Slim and Willie Dixon (3:22)<br />
08. 11th Street Overcrossing - Kincaid (2:12)<br />
09. Corrine, Corrina - Chatmon, Dylan, Parish, Traditional…(2:55)<br />
10. Tulsa County - Polland (2:42)<br />
11. Walkin' Down the Line - Bob Dylan (2:13)<br />
12. Girl with Green Eyes - Kincaid (2:14)<br />
13. Sunny's Dream - Kincaid (3:01)<br />
14. Spanish Lace Blues - Kincaid (2:12)<br />
15. The Devil's Got My Woman - Skip James (3:05)<br />
16. Take a Giant Step - Gerry Goffin and Carole King (2:54)<br />
17. Flyin' So High - Kincaid (3:05)<br />
18. Dust My Broom - Robert Johnson, Elmore James (3:03)<br />
19. Last Fair Deal Gone Down - Robert Johnson (2:38)<br />
20. Baby, What You Want Me to Do - Jimmy Reed (2:54)<br />
21. Statesboro Blues [take 2] - Blind Willie McTell (2:24)<br />
22. I Got a Little - Kincaid (2:07)<br />
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Many thanks to Cacu of the Lake<br />
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