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6 Reviews
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another view of the Nashville Skyline,
By Nicholas Bates "Niccho" (Syndey, NSW, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Moonshot (Audio CD)
Moonshot doesn't have too much competition as the best country rock album of the seventies (and hey, maybe the eighties and nineties too) by a Native North American Woman! Just what is so good about this record? For a start, its the songs - infectious melodies that get in your head and stay there forever. The production is wall of sound meets country rock - short and sharp. Buffy's voice is just right for this full on approach - deep, powerful and that fabulous, evocative vibrato. And as with all of her best albums, the passionate nature of Sainte Marie is never far from the surface, managing to turn even the seemingly benign, "He's an Indian Cowboy in the Rodeo" into a political anthem. I guess how I really know Moonshot is such a great record is that I've consistently played it over the years and never grown tired of it. Compared to "I used to wanna be a ballerina" which I think was its follow up, Moonshot is just a much more consistent and inspired record - an almost forgotten masterpieces which, if it was by Dylan or another male contemporary would be considered 'classic' etc by now and raved about. Moonshot was recorded in Nashville and was co-produced (I think) by Sainte Marie and the hotshot producer of the day, Norman Putnam. Just great to know this record is available on CD and hope that fans of the current generation of power girl popsters might explore this and other gems from a previous but still glorious era!
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Buffy's Best,
By Larry D (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Moonshot (Audio CD)
In my opinion, Buffy's finest album, bar none. Her famous vibrato seems markedly less prominent than usual, and her vocals are among the most appealing of her recording career. Gone the twee, self-conciously "folky" singing of some of her other records. She full-on belts on rockers like "Not the Lovin' Kind" and "Native North American Child", the rockabilly "My Baby Left Me", the anthemic "Mister Can't You See". She turns sex kitten, Kate Bush high notes and breathless delivery on "You Know How to Turn on Those Lights" ("doncha, baby?"). Best of all is the haunting title tune, sung in a voice filled with wonder by a space-age Native North American child, wishing "bon voyage" to those venturing into the cosmos, confiding that she knows "a boy from a tribe so primitive/he can call me up without no telephone". I'm not a Buffy fan by and large; but this is one of my all-time favorite albums.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Thought provoking, Buffy Sainte Marie,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Moonshot (Audio CD)
In the mid-seventies, this album, especially the title song, made such an impression on me, that for twenty years I've looked for it in Tower, Goodies, and the rest with no luck. "Off into outerspace you go my friend" is a line from the title song that has never left me
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Moonshot is fab!!!,
This review is from: Moonshot (Audio CD)
All of the songs are my favorites but several standout such as "Native North American Child," "Lay It Down," "He's An Indian Cowboy In the Rodeo," "Moonshot and "You Know How To Turn On Those Lights". You'll have a great time listening to this cd numerous times. Enjoy!!!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
review,
By
This review is from: MOONSHOT LP (Vinyl)
It was kind of interesting to hear this Buffy Sainte-Marie album after starting off with her 1964 debut. Eight years and six studio sets apparently made for some massive personal and musical changes in her life. Co-produced by Sainte-Marie and Norbert Putnam, 1972's "Moonshot" found her pulling a page out of the Neil Young songbook, recording the album in Nashville with many of the same musicians Young had used on "Harvest". While most facts recording in Nashville tend to get swept into a country groove (think Dylan), that wasn't the case for Sainte-Marie. Yeah, there were some occasional country influences including a pair of Mickey Newbury covers), but musically the most of the album offered up an interesting mix of pop commerciality ('I Wanna Hold Your Hand Forever' and 'Lay It Down') and folksier stuff that underscored Sainte-Marie's longstanding activist agenda ('He's An Indian Cowboy In the Rodeo' and 'Native North American Child'). To my ears her voice remained an interesting instrument - quite powerful, but with a weird vibrato/warble that some folks find irritating, if not outright excrutiating. All I can advise is that you give it a chance; the edge tends to wear off after a couple of spins.
- The blazing opener 'Not the Lovin' Kind' has always reminded me a bit of a pissed off "Broken English"-era Marianne Faithful. Sainte-Marie's vocals literally seethed with anger and frustration on this one. You got the clear feeling that she wasn't someone you wanted to tick off and stood as one of those song's that's extremely scary to any guy who has recently done a woman wrong ... Fantastic performance and one of the album highlights - nothing else on the album even came close. rating: ***** stars - Opening up with an almost bubble-gum tinged arrangement, 'You Know How To Turn On Those Lights' could have easily been mistaken for a Melanie effort. Every time I hear Sainte-Marie hitting those stratospheric high notes I makes me smile. Shame it was one of the album' shortest performances. rating: **** stars - Complete with a beautiful Baroque horn arrangement, the pretty ballad 'I Wanna Hold Your Hand Forever' was even more top 40-ish. Yeah, the lyrics haven't aged well ("I'm painting lions on your trousers ..." did folks really do that in the '70s ?) and longtime fans were probably left scratching their heads on this one ... By the way, if you don't like her vibrato this is probably one to stay away from. rating: *** stars - Sainte-Marie's long-standing advocacy for American Indian rights was seldom as sweet as on the bouncy, country-tinged 'He's An Indian Cowboy In the Rodeo'. Ah, life's first heartbreak ... rating: *** stars - The first cover tune, 'Lay It Down' was accompanied by a massive Phil Spector-styled arrangement. Perhaps side one's most readily commercial track, most singers probably would have been swept away by the arrangement, but Sainte-Marie managed to hold her own. Quite a pretty song with a great hook and some thought provoking lyrics. rating: *** stars - Another pretty country-tinged number with a strange lyric (which I've never fully understood), "Moonshot" found Sainte-Marie at her most poetic. Personally it didn't do all that much for me, though fans gush over this tune. Another one where the vibrato when into overdrive ... rating: *** stars - If you didn't think Sainte-Marie could rock out I suggest checking out 'Native North American Child'. If for no other reason, the song was impressive just to hear her machine-gun delivery of all those native American tribe names ... The song also contained the album's best Billy Sanford guitar solo. rating: **** stars - Given my expectations were non-existent, Sainte-Marie's cover of Arthur Crudup's 'My Baby Left Me' was quite good. Probably the best female cover of the tune's I've every heard. rating: *** stars - One of two Mickey Newbury covers, 'Sweet Memories' was a bit too country for my tastes. Another one that sounded a bit like a Melanie performance. rating: ** stars - Probably the weirdest performance, 'Jeremiah' had this strange, but cool funky edge to it ... I've heard it dozens of times and still can't get my head around it. rating: *** stars - The second Mickey Newbury cover, 'Mister Can't You See' had actually been released as a single before the album came out. Not bad As mentioned, the album spun off a series of three singles: - 1971's 'Mister Can't You See' b/w 'Moonshot' (Vanguard catalog number VRS 35151) - 1972's 'He's An Indian Cowboy In the Rodeo' b/w 'Not the Lovin' Kind' (Vanguard catalog number VRS 35156)- 1973's 'I Wanna Hold Your Hand forever' b/w 'Jeremiah' (Vanguard catalog number VRS 35172) I wouldn't want to hear this one everyday, but got to tall you that 'Not the Lovin' Kind' might be worth the price of admission on its own. "Moonshot" track listing: (side 1) 1.) Not the Lovin' Kind (Buffy Sainte-Marie) - 3:50 2.) You Know How To Turn On Those Lights (Buffy Sainte-Marie) - 2:01 3.) I Wanna Hold Your Hand Forever (Buffy Sainte-Marie) - 2:55 4.) He's An Indian Cowboy In the Rodeo (Buffy Sainte-Marie) - 2:05 5.) Lay It Down (Gene Thomasson) - 2:43 6.) Moonshot (Buffy Sainte-Marie) - 3:45 (side 2) 1.) Native North American Child (Buffy Sainte-Marie) - 2:10 2.) My Baby Left Me (Arthur Crudup) - 2:57 3.) Sweet Memories (Mickey Newbury) - 3:15 4.) Jeremiah (Buffy Sainte-Marie) - 3:04 5.) Mister Can't You See (Mickey Newbury) - 3:10
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Buffy Sainte Marie,
By mtatransitwn (Torrance California USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Moonshot (Audio CD)
I have been listening to Buffy since I was 10 yrs old. When I was in elementry school we listened to her at lunch in the cafeteria. She is the best. She is a folk singer and song writer. Wish I could meet her in person
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Moonshot by Buffy Sainte-Marie (Audio CD - 1996)
$11.98 $8.03
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