Bestsellers > Music > Compilations
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People Take Warning! Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs 1913-1938(more) »rank: 20740by: Various Artists
:Album Description:'In the late 1920's and early 1930's, the Depression gripped the Nation. It was a time when songs were tools for living. A whole community would turn out to mourn the loss of a member and to sow their songs like seeds. This collection is a wild garden grown from those seeds.' - Tom Waits, from the Introduction Songs of death, destruction and disaster, recorded by black and white performers from the dawn of American roots recording are here, assembled together for the first time. Whether they ... |
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Theme Time Radio Hour: With Your Host Bob Dylan(more) »rank: 18059from: Ace Records UK
:Album Description:Ace is proud to present a 2008 double CD paying tribute to Theme Time Radio Hour hosted by Bob Dylan. For those that are new to the show, each radio program lasts an hour and has a different theme each week, often something simple like 'Drink', or 'Mother'. On the radio program each track is introduced by Dylan with his dry humor, eclectic interest and vast musical knowledge. On this CD set, though, Dylan himself does not appear; just selected tracks that he played on his shows. ... |
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Pure Blues(more) »rank: 13080by: Various Artists
: :A good introduction to modern guitar-based blues, Pure Blues features classics by Muddy Waters, Freddy King, Bobby Bland, and John Lee Hooker, along with recent blues stars like Stevie Ray Vaughan and his followers Kenny Wayne Shepherd and Jonny Lang. While attributing classic status to Susan Tedeschi's 'Just Won't Burn' may chafe some purists, this comp clearly wasn't intended for the die-hard blues fanatic. But as an introduction, it illustrates the blues tradition and its influence on rock (and rock's influence on the blues) quite nicely. For fans ... |
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Good For What Ails You: Music of the Medicine Shows 1926-1937 (Digipak with 72-page booklet)(more) »rank: 11482by: Pink Anderson, Gid Tanner, Gus Cannon, Emmett Miller, Charlie Poole, Dallas String Band, Grant Brothers, Uncle Dave Macon, Beans Hambone, Clarence Ashley, Blue Ridge Mountain Entertainers, Gwen Foster, Carolina Tar Heels
:Album Description:Earning Their White Stripes. 'But what I'm listening to most of the time at present is an album called Good For What Ails You, which is an album of songs that people used to listen to at medicine shows all over the States. It's quite an interesting album and I think that people would be well advised to pick it up.' Jack White - Sunday Mail (Australia) Dec 18, 2005 Five Stars. Groundbreaking. 'Fans of Nick Tosches' Where Dead Voices Gather will lap up this extraordinary snapshot ... |
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Anthology of Boogie Woogie Piano(more) »rank: 10194by: Various Artists
:Album Details:The Infectious Rhythms of Boogie Woogie Piano were a Huge Influence on Rock and Roll, and Here We Present Original Masters Albert Ammons, Meade 'Lux' Lewis, Pete Johnson, Clarence 'Pine Top' Smith, Blind Leroy Garnett, Jimmy Yancey, Montana Taylor, and More. |
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Blues Masters, Vol. 4: Harmonica Classics(more) »rank: 26022by: Various Artists
:Album Details:The Infectious Rhythms of Boogie Woogie Piano were a Huge Influence on Rock and Roll, and Here We Present Original Masters Albert Ammons, Meade 'Lux' Lewis, Pete Johnson, Clarence 'Pine Top' Smith, Blind Leroy Garnett, Jimmy Yancey, Montana Taylor, and More. |
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Southern Soul Radio(more) »rank: 15746by: Various Artists
:Album Description:Today Southern Soul is the name placed on the music you've always loved. Unfortunately, corporate radio has removed it from the mainstream and pushed it to specialty shows for a few limited hours...until now! You can finally hear all your favorites on this CD, which contains hits from Floyd Taylor, Mel Waiters, Tyrone Davis, Johnnie Taylor, Chuck Strong, Mr. David, Vick Allen, and many more! |
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Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens: The Big Ol' Box of New Orleans(more) »rank: 31373by: Various Artists
:Album Description:Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens: The Big Ol’ Box of New Orleans takes the music of the Big Easy and puts it in the context of that vibrant city in a way that has never been done before. The four CDs feature more than 80 hits—old and new—by such artists as Dr. John, Professor Longhair, Louis Armstrong, The Meters, Fats Domino, Buckwheat Zydeco and many others. The result is a spicy gumbo containing all of New Orleans’ musical styles and flavors: jazz and blues, Cajun and Zydeco, ... |
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Prison Songs (Historical Recordings From Parchman Farm 1947-48), Vol. 1: Murderous Home(more) »rank: 19544by: Various Artists
:Album Description:'These songs belong to the musical tradition which Africans brought to the New World, but they are also as American as the Mississippi River. They were born out of the very rock and earth of this country, as black hands broke the soil, moved, reformed it, and rivers of stinging sweat poured upon the land under the blazing heat of Southern skies, and are mounted upon the passion that this struggle with nature brought forth. They tell us the story of the slave gang, the sharecropper system, ... |
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Lady Sings the Blues(more) »rank: 48046by: Various Artists
: :We've called them torch singers, divas, chanteuses, and the First Ladies of American Song. And as the contemporary, Grammy-bedecked ascent of Norah Jones (who appears here with Charlie Hunter) attests, these ladies who sing the blues continue to reinterpret a tradition rooted in the blues, yet steeped in songcraft that spans jazz, pop, and even rock. This double-disc, 26-track collection spans a half-century-plus and offers up not only a tantalizing introduction to legends and pioneers (including Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Della Reese, Etta James, Lena Horne) and an ... |

Where the NBA Dynasty series (the other initial entry is the slightly meatier Los Angeles Lakers: The Complete History) outdoes Ultimate Jordan is in the six playoff games--one for each year--as they were originally broadcast, minus halftime and commercials. Having the nearly complete game (usually running 90-100 minutes, from the TV introductions to post-game interviews) means you can skip straight to John Paxson's clutch basket or what was expected to be the final shot of Jordan's career. Or you can savor each game in its entirety, all the better to appreciate the artistry of Jordan in his three-pointer barrage against Portland or his "flu game" against Utah. You can see other great players too, of course, including Jordan's teammates--Scottie Pippen, Horace Grant, Dennis Rodman--and those opponents unfortunate enough to face the Bulls--Clyde Drexler, Charles Barkley, John Stockton, Karl Malone, and others. Because these are all NBA Finals games, you won't see Jordan's shot over Craig Ehlo or his 63-point coming-out party against Boston, but the 1990s Chicago Bulls were a team for the ages, and merely having their games--some of them all-time classics--available for home viewing is a major milestone in archived sports. --David Horiuchi

While last-minute heroics tend to be the standard by which we define excellence, there are many other moments that have left an indelible impression, many of them highlighted here. The video clips fall into 10 categories: Dunks, Alley-oops, Assists, Steals, Blocks, Teamwork, the Clutch Shot, Moves, Hustle, and Buzzer-Beaters. At the beginning of each section is a brief introduction. Before showing the top 10 dunks of all time, for example, we learn about the evolution of the dunk--from the first slam to the man who could fly, Michael Jordan--and we hear background commentary from NBA legends such as Magic Johnson, Charles Barkley, Dr. J, and Bill Russell. This video recalls familiar moments of NBA lore that you will want to own for countless repeat viewings. --Jeremy Storey