It’s amazing to think that these are virtually all recordings Dylan discarded, given that many of them outshine everything in lots of artists’ catalogs.
Author: Jeff Burger
The original 10-track 1971 album has been expanded for this release to include…well, more than you could have possibly imagined
The 5-CD box features music spanning five decades, including collaborations with Eric Clapton, Billy Gibbons and, of course, brother Stevie Ray Vaughan
The cast album delivers a thoroughly magical hour of music, one that will leave you in awe of the performers and the show’s creators.
On her fifth solo album, the singer proves that she can still come out fighting, at least when her material is up to the task.
The box proves that the band’s genius didn’t end in the mid-’60s. All six members of the group contributed fine material during this unheralded period.
The new edition, which adds nearly 50 previously unreleased tracks, offers numerous reminders that the album deserves its sterling reputation.
The Stones are in fine form at the Brazilian show as they tackle classic material, none of which should need any introduction to anyone.
The set embraces some of Nyro’s best-known compositions, including “Wedding Bell Blues,” “And When I Die” and “Save the Country,” plus terrific covers.
With several personnel changes, they sound somewhat different, but the album recalls Neil Finn’s lush, richly textured, understated solo work.