Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
ACES WERE AMAZING!!!, October 1, 2000
By A Customer
This album was tremendous when it was first released, and it's even better today, thanks to the Amazing Rhythm Aces' re-mastering and the inclusion of the lyrics along with original art. Yes, there are in fact "twofers" available of this title, but this one is the real gem (and since the Aces probably aren't making anything off those inferior versions, it would be great to support them and not another record label that just wanted to make a few bucks off their hard work.)
|
|
|
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Six stars, on a scale of one to five, September 15, 2001
This is one of my "two-fer" vinyl albums, meaning I liked it so much I wore the vinyl out and bought a second copy to use soley as a master for making cassettes to play. I searched in vain for years before finding it on compact disc. This is one of those rare albums in that there is not a clunker on the set. The Aces deftly mixed country, bluegrass, R&B and their own brand of Memphis soul to become one of the most eclectic, entertaining bands of the 1970s. "Third Rate Romance," a wry song about the free love atmosphere of the 1970s, was a Top-40 hit that got a lot of airplay when this album hit the airwaves in '75. The song (along with a video) was recently covered by country artist Sammy Kershaw. My favorite tune on this set is "The Ella-B," another Russell Smith-penned song taking the listener on an R&B flavored trip on a Mississippi River paddleboat. "Life's Railway to Heaven" is a nice introduction to this band's instrumental virtuosity in a bluegrass tune with a neat false ending followed by some incredible picking. "Who Will the Next Fool Be?" and "My Tears Still Flow" feature the band's tight harmonies and some tasty James Hooker piano, while "Amazing Grace (Used to be Her Favorite Song)" got some FM radio airplay as a clever, tongue-in-cheek country parody. Emma Jean is a hilarious, Carribean-tempo song about a rather dense man with a crush on a lesbian. The album wraps up nicely with "King of the Cowboys," a wonderul homage to the "dying breed" of the American cowboy. This is THE Aces album to own, although you might consider the two-for CD that includes this album and "Too Stuffed to Jump," a more uneven effort that is worth picking up solely to get the tunes "The End is Not in Sight (The Cowboy Tune)" and "Dancing the Night Away." (Tanya Tucker did a nice cover of "Dancing the Night Away" in the late 1970s.) This band recently reformed and began touring, and would be well worth seeing, although original pianist James Hooker, long-time bandleader for Nancy Griffith, decided not to rejoin the Aces.
|
|
|
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
5* but buy the other release with this LP, September 21, 2000
This is one of the greatest country rock LP of all time, but just dont buy it, there is another release of this LP with their LP "Too stuffed to jump" together holding 74 minutes of one of the best bands in the 70's. So go for the other release, and see my review there.
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|