Bestsellers > Music > Slide Guitar
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Live(more) »rank: 15769by: George Thorogood & the Destroyers
:Album Description:A repackage of the previously available classic live album Thorogood Live, with extended booklet and sleevenotes. This was recorded at the Cincinnati Gardens, Ohio, USA, May 1986 and is Thorogood and his blistering, blues rock best. 10 Destroyer's epics, including fans favorites such as 'Who Do You Love?', 'One Bourbon', 'One Scotch', 'One Beer', 'Bad To The Bone' and 'Madison Blues'. EMI Gold. 2006. |
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Deluxe Edition(more) »rank: 59565by: Hound Dog Taylor & the Houserockers
: :One could conceivably argue that Hound Dog Taylor was a blues punk; he favored energy, excitement, and above all, fun over minor considerations like, say, tuning. It's that exuberance that carries the day on this best-of collection. It's all material from Taylor's too-brief stint at Alligator in the 1970s (he died in 1975), but it's all good blues--blues good enough to launch a record label. Taylor's guitar is grungy enough to get a starring role in a Seattle band circa 1990, and while his voice never quite rises out of a monotone, it's still oddly expressive. Fast, furious, and brimming with energy, Taylor ... |
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Woodstock Album(more) »rank: 61378by: Muddy Waters
:Album Description:Limited Edition Japanese pressing of this album comes housed in a miniature LP sleeve. 2007. :When The Band's drummer Levon Helm set up a Woodstock-based recording studio and production company in 1975, his first client was the legendary bluesman Muddy Waters. Surrounding him with familiar sidemen Pinetop Perkins and Bob Margolin, plus such simpatico rock and blues stalwarts as The Band's Garth Hudson on accordion and organ, Paul Butterfield on harp, and Howard Johnson on saxophone, the 60-year-old Waters responded with the smoothest and most supple singing of his career. These two sessions are as delightful as any in his long association ... |
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Anthology(more) »rank: 21710by: George Thorogood & the Destroyers
: :Though his audience isn't as big as it used to be, George Thorogood has, at the very least, attained minor-legend status. After all, was there anyone who saw Terminator 2 and didn't recognize 'Bad to the Bone' from the very opening riff? Thorogood is the punk-rock god of the blues, thrashing out Chicago riffs with confidence, even though he's never been technically brilliant--his interpretation of 'The Sky Is Crying,' included on Anthology, is pedestrian at best. But Thorogood has always made up for in enthusiasm and energy anything he might have lacked in technique. It's likely that more people have heard his versions ... |
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Dark Was the Night(more) »rank: 126934by: Blind Willie Johnson
: :Along with Robert Johnson, Son House, Charley Patton, and others, Blind Willie Johnson was one of the founding fathers of the blues. This 16-song collection features some of his best, most classic work, a distillation of the 30 songs he recorded (all of which are available on Complete Recordings of Blind Willie Johnson). Unlike his peers, however, Johnson's focus was on spiritual music, which he performed in church and on street corners, his chilling, gravelly voice complemented by guitar work that is nothing short of exquisite. Many of the songs taken up and popularized by Johnson's contemporaries and successors were written by him, ... |
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Hound Dog Taylor and the Houserockers(more) »rank: 93437by: Hound Dog Taylor & the Houserockers
:Album Description:Limited Edition Japanese pressing of this album comes housed in a miniature LP sleeve. 2007. :If you think the slide guitar blues of Elmore James is as loud and ragged as music can be, then you've never heard Hound Dog Taylor. Born Theodore Roosevelt Taylor in Natchez, Mississippi, in 1915, he didn't pick up the guitar until he was 20, and was instantly smitten by the rawboned sound players like James got by slipping a slide across the strings of an electric guitar. The raw, boogie style of his trio (with Brewer Phillips on second guitar and Ted Harvey on drums) was ... |
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Hey, Where's Your Brother?(more) »rank: 20275by: Johnny Winter
:Album Description:Limited Edition Japanese pressing of this album comes housed in a miniature LP sleeve. 2007. :If you think the slide guitar blues of Elmore James is as loud and ragged as music can be, then you've never heard Hound Dog Taylor. Born Theodore Roosevelt Taylor in Natchez, Mississippi, in 1915, he didn't pick up the guitar until he was 20, and was instantly smitten by the rawboned sound players like James got by slipping a slide across the strings of an electric guitar. The raw, boogie style of his trio (with Brewer Phillips on second guitar and Ted Harvey on drums) was ... |
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The Rough Guide to Delta Blues(more) »rank: 93770by: Various Artists
:Album Description:Limited Edition Japanese pressing of this album comes housed in a miniature LP sleeve. 2007. :If you think the slide guitar blues of Elmore James is as loud and ragged as music can be, then you've never heard Hound Dog Taylor. Born Theodore Roosevelt Taylor in Natchez, Mississippi, in 1915, he didn't pick up the guitar until he was 20, and was instantly smitten by the rawboned sound players like James got by slipping a slide across the strings of an electric guitar. The raw, boogie style of his trio (with Brewer Phillips on second guitar and Ted Harvey on drums) was ... |
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Steal This Movie (2000 Film)(more) »rank: 135501by: Steve Earle & Sheryl Crow, Bonnie Raitt, Phil Ochs, Joan Osborne & Jackson Browne, Ani DiFranco, Country Joe & The Fish, Edwin Starr, Eric Burdon & Billy Preston, Timothy B. Schmit, Mary Chapin Carpenter
: :The original Yippie, Abbie Hoffman left little room for compromise. His combative activism eventually forced him underground and guaranteed him a place in the lexicon of alternative Sixties culture. The soundtrack features both original 1960s protest music from Phil Ochs, Edwin Starr, and Country Joe and the Fish and remakes of classic songs from an impressive list of modern musicians. The reinterpretations are strong. Steve Earle and Sheryl Crow belt out the Chambers Brothers' 'Time Has Come Today' with a punk edge. Bonnie Raitt has never sounded more relaxed, underlining the somber sentiments of Bob Dylan's 'It's All Over Now, Baby Blue' with ... |
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Roll Away the Stone(more) »rank: 58360by: Kelly Joe Phelps
: :The original Yippie, Abbie Hoffman left little room for compromise. His combative activism eventually forced him underground and guaranteed him a place in the lexicon of alternative Sixties culture. The soundtrack features both original 1960s protest music from Phil Ochs, Edwin Starr, and Country Joe and the Fish and remakes of classic songs from an impressive list of modern musicians. The reinterpretations are strong. Steve Earle and Sheryl Crow belt out the Chambers Brothers' 'Time Has Come Today' with a punk edge. Bonnie Raitt has never sounded more relaxed, underlining the somber sentiments of Bob Dylan's 'It's All Over Now, Baby Blue' with ... |


