Amazon.com: Raising Sand: MP3 Downloads: Robert Plant and Alison Krauss




Raising Sand
 
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Price: $8.99
Album Savings: $3.88 compared to buying all songs

3.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (609 customer reviews)
  • Original Release Date: October 23, 2007
  • Format: MP3, 256 kbps — plays on iPod® and all MP3 players

MP3 Songs
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Rich Woman 4:05$0.99Buy Track
listen  2. Killing the Blues 4:17$0.99Buy Track
listen  3. Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us 3:25$0.99Buy Track
listen  4. Polly Come Home 5:39$0.99Buy Track
listen  5. Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On) 3:33$0.99Buy Track
listen  6. Through the Morning, Through the Night 4:02$0.99Buy Track
listen  7. Please Read the Letter 5:55$0.99Buy Track
listen  8. Trampled Rose 5:33$0.99Buy Track
listen  9. Fortune Teller 4:31$0.99Buy Track
listen10. Stick with Me Baby 2:51$0.99Buy Track
listen11. Nothin' 5:34$0.99Buy Track
listen12. Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson 4:01$0.99Buy Track
listen13. Your Long Journey 3:54$0.99Buy Track

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Product Details

  • Original Release Date: October 23, 2007
  • Label: Rounder Records
  • Genres: Folk/Traditional Folk, Rock/General, Pop/Pop Rock, Pop/General, Folk/General
  • ASIN: B000VQS6G8
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (609 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #200 in MP3 Albums (See Bestsellers in MP3 Albums)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #1 in  MP3 Albums > Folk > Traditional Folk
    #3 in  MP3 Albums > Pop > Pop Rock
    #72 in  MP3 Albums > Rock

 

Customer Reviews

609 Reviews
5 star:
 (329)
4 star:
 (90)
3 star:
 (51)
2 star:
 (50)
1 star:
 (89)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (609 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
214 of 238 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Truly signficant, October 30, 2007
By Dave Goldberg (40 miles north of NYC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Raising Sand (Audio CD)
This is wonderful listening. Even more, it's truly significant. That's in part because of the reaction _ I don't how many times in the last few months I've read about what seems to "critics'' and others to be a truly strange pairing. Something like: "You'd never expect two singers so far apart to team up, but it seems to work.''

That's nonsense (except the part about it working _ it doesn't "seem,'' it's real.) That's because the "critics'' and others put music in boxes and can't understand a pairing of "bluegrass,'' (the quotes are intentional) and heavy metal. This is Americana, but Americana as interpreted by Plant, Krauss and T-Bone Burnett that transcends category in a way that few albums do. Look on top. How many different categories does it rank No. 1. _ Rock, pop, folk, international. That's what music should be but too often isn't because the folks who run record companies and radio stations want to put music in the narrowest possible category.

It's also a breakthrough for all three artists, including Burnett, but especially Krauss, who in her last few albums has boxed herself in with very nice listenable material that's too often predictable. A couple of the albums won Grammys(she has 20)and they're incredibly well produced and performed, but after a while one Robert Lee Castleman song turns into another and the effect is underwhelming.

On this one, she uses all her talents, even, perhaps even as the excellent producer she is _ Burnett clearly took her advice and Plant's on some of the songs. Her country/bluegrass fiddle turns into gypsy violin on "Sister Rosetta,'' producing a haunting effect that's rarely heard in this kind of music.

Beyond that, I've never heard an album where the voices blend so well that it's hard to tell where one stops and the other picks up _ Tom Waits' "Trampled Rose'' is the exemplar of that and the most fascinating and haunting song on the album.

But it's almost all wonderful and it ends with what sounds very much like a little game being played by Burnett and Krauss in particular. The last number begins with Mike Seeger on autoharp leading into a Doc Watson gospel tune. Seeger discovered Elizabeth Cotten, who was his family's housekepper, and he was one of the pioneers who convinced record labels to record roots artists, Watson among them. It's also the most Krauss-like _ it's closest to what she does, right down to using a gospel number to close her albums (and her shows.)

But most of this is totally new territory for both artists. Maybe Krauss should have gone there a decade ago or maybe the timing is perfect. It's one of the few albums _ Luncinda Williams' "Essence'' is another _ that can get away with slow tempos and minor keys on two-thirds of the songs and not sound repetitious or boring.

Again, it's most important because it defies category. Other artists are trying _ Ben Harper and Norah Jones, with whom Krauss guested on a Bonnie Raitt show/CD/DVD are mingling pop, rock, country, gospel and reggae (in Harper's case.) The more the younger generation goes beyong genre and into "just music,'' the better off we'll all be. (Uh, no, Plant, at 59, isn't exactly the younger generation, but he's been looking for new frontiers for a decade or more.)

He's also a Brit and Brits tend to understand American music better than most Americans. In any case, people like Mark Knopfler, Steve Winwood, Van Morrison and even Jagger/Richard stay away from boxes. (And, by the way, I just heard Krauss do a wonderful version of Winwood/Traffic's "I Can't Find My Way Home'' on XM) It was issued three years ago as part of a TV Soundtrack. So yes, she's known for a long time that there's a big wide world of music out there.

This landmark album makes that point even more strongly.








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132 of 150 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Everything You Wanted it to Be!, October 22, 2007
By A* (New York, N.Y. United States) - See all my reviews
  
This review is from: Raising Sand (Audio CD)
I have been waiting on this disc. I mean really waiting, like marking off the days on a calendar waiting. We don't have to go over the basics, how Plant and Krauss are gifts from the VOCAL GODS!! But what surprises me about this disc is how understated it all is. The music is the winner here -- well, the listener is.

The opening song "Rich Woman" with its elastic bass line and krauss almost purring into an oft-kilter bluesy tone is pure magic, but its also eerie as all get out. But so is most of this disc. It's almost as if Burnett turned up the gothic horror to a Tim Burton soundtrack and planted it down in the South.

Clark's "Through the Morning, Through the Night," gets more than an honest reading, the harmony between the two bleeds into one soft cushion that hugs the melody. And is honest and bitterly romantic. Wait's "Trampled Rose" gets another great reading, with Krauss howling just above a thumping beat. "Killing The Blues" gives Plants voice such softness and lilt that for some reason it reminds me of vintage Righteous Brothers.

The disc is excellent, and so far is my running for album of the year. They have taped an episode for CMT Crossroads and they have both stated that they are more than willing to work with each other again. And I will be marking off those days as well on my calendar. A gem of an album from two amazing singers with extremely rare gifts.
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75 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Raising Sand raises the bar for collaborative work, October 31, 2007
This review is from: Raising Sand (Audio CD)
A self-named "Led Head" friend of mine told me about this CD. His thoughts were that the world as we knew it was coming to end when Robert Plant joined up with a 'country musician'. Having somewhat more eclectic tastes--I didn't think so.

What a treat to open the CD and hear "Rich Woman" on Halloween. A.D.D's headliner review gives the best description of the Southern Gothic 'feel'.

Another particularly eerie song is "Fortune Teller," where Plant sings the tale of a young man who goes to a fortune teller and discovers that he will fall in love with the first woman he sees--which turns out to be the Fortune Teller herself--now he's happy as can be and he gets his fortune told for free. (Yup, corny as KS--but the sound is very cool!)

For the most part, the music will probably suit Alison Krauss fans more than Plant's, but Plant's fans need to listen--just to hear how strong the man can be on soft music.

The best of any profession are the people who raise the bar for the rest. The test of a great collaborative work is -- is the whole better than the sum of its parts? Plant, Krauss, and Burnett started out at the top of their respective forms, but this CD is truly a masterwork among their individual collections, too. "Raising Sand" is going to open the door for a long more mind-bending work.


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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars NIce listening
First time listening to this I was continually aware of the driving percussion beat on most of the songs. By the third time, I was really into this cd. Nice listening. Read more
Published 5 hours ago by Handyman

5.0 out of 5 stars Unlikely But Amazing Duets
Raising Sand is a CD that would be worth six stars if you could give a rating that high. When I first heard that Allison Krauss and Robert Plant recorded a CD, I thought that... Read more
Published 22 days ago by P. Heath

5.0 out of 5 stars Superior CD
This is one of the best CD's I have heard in years! Robert Plant and Alison Krauss are simply great together!
Their voices are wonderful-I love it!
Published 22 days ago by Bennett E. Hodge

5.0 out of 5 stars All I can say is wow.
Allison Krauss continues to satisfy. This collaberation with Robert Plant is a must for fans of either person. Read more
Published 25 days ago by R. Weyandt

5.0 out of 5 stars Music is life
Alison Krause is bluegrass? Heck I thought she was into religous music as I saw "O Brother, Where art thou. Read more
Published 27 days ago by wikyups

1.0 out of 5 stars Don't waste your money!
I was really disappointed in this CD.
I am a "back in the day" Zepp fan & have always enjoyed listening to Alison Krauss, however-- the two of them together just don't jell... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Twyceshy

1.0 out of 5 stars STOP! ONLY BUY THE REMASTER!!!!
This album is distorted. The songs are excellent, which is to be expected from these two, but the bass and drums were badly recorded. Read more
Published 1 month ago by ANALOG

4.0 out of 5 stars Raising Sand
Raising Sand is a great collaboration album by the likes of Robert Plant and Alison Krauss and was released to great reviews and peaked at #2 on the Billboard 200 and also... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Bjorn Viberg

5.0 out of 5 stars Plant and Krauss seduce us with melody and vulnerability.
Love this record. Plant keeps reinventing himself. Krauss' voice with Plant's is lovely combination. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Margaret A. Criner

5.0 out of 5 stars Give this one a chance
I don't write reviews (I actually don't think I have ever written one), but I love reading them. I just happened to click on the reviews for this album and actually laughed out... Read more
Published 2 months ago by T. Morris

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Sound Engineering 15 27 days ago
Good pairing, but ... 46 February 2009
The Tasteless, Vicious Mean Spirited Reviews 18 February 2009
The Tour 6 October 2008
FANS OF ROBERT PLANT & ALISON KRAUSS WHO WANT A CONCERT TOUR 8 June 2008
Song writer attribution? 2 November 2007
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