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Music CD - Ry Cooder: Paradise and Lunch

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Music CD: Paradise and Lunch Artist: Ry Cooder
List Price: $11.98
Our Price: $6.93
Your Save: $ 5.05 ( 42% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Reprise / Wea
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Tamp 'Em Up Solid 2. Tattler 3. Married A Man's A Fool 4. Jesus On The Mainline 5. It's All Over Now 6. Fool For A Cigarette/ Feelin' Good 7. If Walls Could Talk 8. Mexican Divorce 9. Ditty Wah Ditty
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0075992721226 Label: Reprise / Wea Manufacturer: Reprise / Wea Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Reprise / Wea Release Date: 1990-10-25 Studio: Reprise / Wea
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: My favorite Ry album and the worst remastering job of the series Comment: Well, the packaging IS cool, with reproductions not only of the LP sleeve and disc label, but also the inner paper sleeve. However, the sound is a disaster. The entire disc has been given an extreme treble boost, which creates distortion and completely changes its character. On many songs the percussion (especially cymbals and snare) dominates the mix, making a song such as "Tamp 'Em Up Solid" sound almost like cocktail jazz. The old CD sounds muffled in comparison, but it - like the rest of Reprise's domestic CD reissues - was true to the original LP sound. Warner Brothers engineers (and Ry) had wonderful ears, and I'm sure the mix we heard in 1974 was close to the one they wanted. This is like listening to a band from inside the snare drum. I don't know how someone listening to this album for the first time would react to the new mix, but I can't handle it. Painful and disappointing.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Ry's best, with some immortal slide playing Comment: The Diddy Wah Diddy with Hines is beyond fabulous; so much interplay and groove and touch and taste. My God it's good. To play with one of your heroes and push him to play his very best is something few can accomplish.
The only weak spot here is Ry's original, Tattler. Nice, but kind of lyrically and musically soft beside all these old nuggets. Married Man is funny and grooves hard, with a tight vocal take. Tamp 'Em Up Solid is funky as hell and still one of my favorite tunes to play even after doing it hundreds of times live; this version just sticks in your head and always demands to be given the same wickedly groovy treatment. If Walls Could Talk, Fool For a Cigarette, Jesus On The Mainline...Ry knows how to pick a tune, and then cuts it even better than the original sometimes! His love for the material comes through on every cut.
And his technique, his tone, his sparkling musicality; this is some of the best guitar playing you will ever hear, electric and acoustic, and always flashy in the right way. Been loving this record for 20 years, and always will, I guess.
Old School Americana at its fresh and funky best.
Customer Rating:      Summary: ...A TRUE WORK OF ART! BEAUTIFUL JAPANESE VERSION! Comment: This Japanese mini-lp replica version of Ry Cooder album is simply a work of art! Very beautifully designed with all the lyrics included and with a sound quality remastered to perfection.
This 2007 Warner reissue is by far the best version of this album that is out there; great sound quality, great packaging, great songs! A must have in any CD collector's library. A real collectors item of these guitarist, top 10 of all times
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great disc Comment: I didnt think I was going to like this as much as I did, but whadayaknow, it didnt leave my CD player in my car for like 3 days. This dude can play geetar. At first I wasnt sure about his voice, but then I woke up and realized he's pretty good. And man, he gets down with the guitar on a few songs. Really cool, interesting music for people that like music, and not stuff like Tim McGraw.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Bluesy Americana doesn't get any better than this Comment: Back in my college days in the early 70's I remember this album being voted as Album of the Year by (it seems like) Rolling Stone or Stereophile Magazine - I can't quite remember which. And so I bought it not knowing anything at all about Ry Cooder.
I tend towards music where the rhythms are strong and catchy as they are in early Soul/R&B music. If it isn't a good song in the first place, I don't care how good the instrumentation or the singing are performed. It just won't stand up.
Well, I go back to this album often and I agree with one of the other reviewers in the observation that the songs chosen here are a little eclectic in mix, but they all have that certain flannel shirt and blue jeans Blues funk character to them. The tone on Cooder's bottleneck slide guitar fits them perfectly as does his voice. His playing is stunning on most of the cuts.
The other thing I seem to detect in the choice of songs is a sense of humor. I'm not a big lyrics guy but The Tattler and Married Man's A Fool put a smile on my face every time I hear 'em.
As with several of the other reviewers, this one's in my Top Ten All Time Albums easy...
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Editorial Reviews:
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Think of Ry Cooder as a musicologist who makes learning fun. A particularly nifty collection from 1974, Paradise & Lunch is solo Cooder at his best. The song selection is inspired and unpredictable: numbers by Burt Bacharach, Mississippi Fred McDowell, and Bobby Womack commingle with ease. "Tattler" is a rare Ry original that happens to be one of the collection's highlights. Jazz legend Earl Hines guests on the dapper "Ditty Wa Ditty." --Steven Stolder
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