Music : Live at Carnegie Hall

Music : Live at Carnegie Hall

Live at Carnegie Hall

by: Bill Withers



Live at Carnegie Hall
Buy Now
See Larger Image
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

List Price: $7.98
Your Price: $6.99
You Save: $0.99 (12%)
Prices subject to change.

Average Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 14227










Please click here for more info


Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0886972333021
Format: Live
Label: Sbme Special Mkts.
Manufacturer: Sbme Special Mkts.
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Sbme Special Mkts.
Release Date: February 01, 2008
Sales Rank: 14227
Studio: Sbme Special Mkts.










Editorial Review:

Amazon.com:
Despite the import of the occasion--an October 1972 night at America's most prestigious hall--what really impresses about Bill Withers's Live at Carnegie Hall is the good feeling and sense of interplay passed between the star, his band, and the audience. From the surpassingly casual opening of 'Use Me' and its build through eight-plus minutes and an extended ending to the complexity and occasional joy of Withers's socio-personal 'Lean on Me,' 'I Can't Write Left-Handed,' and a medley of 'Harlem' and 'Cold Bologna,' Carnegie is an underappreciated document of what for a moment was progressive R&B. Always one of music's most humble performers, Withers quietly, intensely proves his mettle over the length of this one-time double LP. --Rickey Wright









Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


Related Items:
Lean on Me-Best of Bill Withers Live Still Bill Just as I Am These Songs for You, Live! see more

Related Items:


Disc 1:
  1. Use Me
  2. Friend of Mine
  3. Ain't No Sunshine
  4. Grandma's Hands
  5. World Keeps Going Around
  6. Let Me in Your Life
  7. Better off Dead
  8. For My Friend
  9. I Can't Write Left Handed
  10. Lean on Me
  11. Lonely Town, Lonely Street
  12. Hope She'll Be Happier
  13. Let Us Love
  14. Harlem/Cold Baloney


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - * Great live performance ...
Bill Withers is oneof the greatest R & B performers EVER. This album confirms it. Too bad I was only 5 years old when he performed at Carnegie Hall... LIVE. Thanks to the miracles of modern tech, I was there, anyway. And I can be there anytime I want. The song 'I Can't Write Left-Handed' is as poignant today as it was when he performed it in '72. The group Sweetback (Sade's boys) did a version of 'Hope She'll Be Happier' that is almost as good as Bill Withers' live version. I'd recommend it to EVERYBODY who likes to hear "real music by real musicians."



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - * more bill ...
great album, same songs but performed with such gusto and soul that they seemed brand new, never tire of listening to it



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - * Music as God intended...really-it's that good. ...
What? you don't have this album already??? well, what are you doing, stop reading this and go NOW!! or press purchase, whatever you need to do to enrich your life with this essential recording. Worth it just for harlem/cold balcony but the rest is just as good. Thanks Bill Withers.

"This strange man over here in Vietnam I don't ever now, ain't never done nothing to, God bless his heart, He done shot me in my shoulder!!.....and I can't write left-handed."
Good God, I love this album.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - * One of my FAVORITE albums! ...
I love this CD....soulful, personal, and the storytelling is intriguing. Bill Withers has always been one of the most underrated artists ever.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - * The best live album I've ever heard... ...
I'm surprised that this isn't mentioned in the same breath as B.B. King's "Live At The Regal" and James Brown's "Live At The Appolo" as one of the best live albums ever. The energy of this performance is amazing and the crowd is so into the music that the whole disc is just ELECTRIC. The live version of "Use Me" is SO good, with the whole crowd clapping on the off beat. Best of all, after the band jams on the song for seven minutes, you can hear the shouts of "One more time!!" from what sounds like the back row of Carnegie Hall. Bill Withers asks the crowd, "One more time?" and the place goes nuts, at which point the band launches back into the song without missing a beat. This is just one of the moments captured here that can only be described as magical. The appreciative round of applause that Withers gets from the crowd after delivering an amazing vocal on "Hope She'll Be Happier" is also noteworthy. Bill Withers really possessed a natural talent for songwriting; his lyrics are simple and direct but say so much. The middle verse of "World Keeps Going Around" where he describes the dating chain of the narrator with a few different women is amazing. Songs like "Grandma's Hands" and "I Can't Write Left Handed" are incredible lyrically also. This was a great performance where everything just clicked: great songs, great band, and an enthusiastic crowd. This should be essential listening for everyone. The finale of Harlem/Cold Baloney is so awesome. Bill Withers gets the whole place to chant "shake em on down" as he leaves the stage. What an ending! This is really an unsung masterpiece.


Hall Carnegie at Live


read more customer reviews on Live at Carnegie Hall


Browse for similar items by category:

 







Digital Camera









$10.99



On her eighth studio album, Damita Jo--the title lifted from her middle name--Janet Jackson teams up with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis once again on what is perhaps the most feverish album in her two decade long career. Whether she's taking the listener on a torrid excursion in the four song island suite, or boasting of her sexual prowess on "Sexhibition's" word games lyrics, where she tells fans "relax, it's just sex," the singer tries hard--maybe too hard--to establish herself as a sexual avatar with portfolio. But in "Strawberry Bounce," she seems more like a pole dancer in stilettos than a social revolutionary, as she catalogs the way she plans to make her inamorato lose control, and she just sounds silly on "Moist," which extols the female orgasm. Instead, the best moments on the album are when Jackson comes off as saucy and winsome instead of a heavy breather, like on the down-tempo "Thinkin' Bout My Ex," her collaboration with Babyface, which seems lifted right out of her autobiography, and on the athletic Prince clone "Just A Little While." The title track is Jackson's own version of J-Lo's "Jenny On the Block," and she sounds just as insincere as Lopez when she tried to convince us that she was just an ordinary neighborhood diva. Instead, Janet’s much more persuasive when she joins up with hip-hop savant Kanye West on "My Baby," pairing her breathy, little girl vocals to his sharp, focused rap. Then and only then does Damita Jo sound like love can actually trump sex. --Jaan Uhelszki

Hall,B0012GMV1M Carnegie At Live
Shopping at music.bestglobalgifts.com  Created at Mon Dec 1 16:25:00 2008