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Music CD - Walela: Unbearable Love
![Unbearable Love. Walela Tracks: Gathering of Eagles - Walela, Weiss, Donna, The Sequence, Cherokee Rose, I Know I Don't Walk on Water - Walela, Satterfield, Laura, Smoke in the Wind, Bright Morning Stars - Walela, Public Domain [1], I Have No Indian Name - Walela, Coolidge, Rita, Tell Them They Lie, When It Comes - Walela, Coolidge, Rita, When Love Was All W](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/417R9GCG94L._SL160_.jpg)
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Music CD: Unbearable Love Artist: Walela
List Price: $16.98
Our Price: $29.98
Your Save: $ ( % )
Availability:
Manufacturer: Triloka Records
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Gathering of Eagles - Walela, Weiss, Donna 2. The Sequence 3. Cherokee Rose 4. I Know I Don't Walk on Water - Walela, Satterfield, Laura 5. Smoke in the Wind 6. Bright Morning Stars - Walela, Public Domain [1] 7. I Have No Indian Name - Walela, Coolidge, Rita 8. Tell Them They Lie 9. When It Comes - Walela, Coolidge, Rita 10. When Love Was All We Knew 11. God Save Us from Ourselves 12. Unbearable Love
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0744447806329 Format: Import Label: Triloka Records Manufacturer: Triloka Records Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Triloka Records Release Date: 2000-03-07 Studio: Triloka Records
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Awful Comment: I've tried to order this CD as a gift for someone a few times now-I get a confirmation and think it's on it's way to me and then the seller KEEPS delaying the order, and by MONTHS! Terrible service-just don't offer it if you can't deliver the product. very annoying.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Unbearable songs... Comment: These ladies have some great vocals, but the Native American aspect here is a little overhyped. This CD is not the same quality as thier first, and is more gospel and country rather than New Age Native American.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Strictly New Age Christian Comment: This is beautiful New Age, Christian music sung by women who are exploiting their Cherokee ancestry. This is nice music if you're a New Ager, a Christian, or a Christian Cherokee. But if you are a Cherokee who holds the traditional Cherokee beliefs dear, you might find this music downright insulting.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Disappointed Comment: I purchased this CD thinking it was a follow up to the first. Wrong. I love love love the first CD. I've been listening to it daily for over a month now and have turned others on to it as well. However, this CD just does not have the Native American flavor I was looking for. There's no magic. I am still listening to it, but the spiritual high I get from the first CD is definitely not present on one. All in all Rita Coolidge is still one of my favorite vocalists.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Totally disappointing... Comment: That's the best way I can describe this album. After buying and falling in love with Walela's debut album, Walela, I was eagerly looking forward to this one. But, sadly, it's like comparing apples and oranges. The songs on this album are unremarkable and seem to my ears to be thrown together. Their first album was incredible and I listen to it daily. I don't see how they could go from amazing to pitiful from one to the next. Listening to this one just doesn't bring forth the same emotion as the first. It's just like listening to any old other country song...there's nothing spiritual about it. And the beautiful harmonies that they displayed in the first are nowhere to be heard. The songs are choppy and vary so much from line to line that it doesn't even seem like the same song sometimes. Very little sound from their Cherokee roots and turns into a total copout. My advice...pass it up. Save your money for something else...I wish I had.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Reprising the trio harmony of Walela's debut, vocalist Rita Coolidge is joined by both her sister Pricilla and her niece, Laura Satterfield. The group leans further into their easy blend of Native gospel pop, venturing into a deep country soul a capella in places, most successfully on the first cut, "Gathering of Eagles." "I Have No Indian Name" employs some nice fiddling, and elsewhere banjo, pump organ, and piano serve to accent primitive percussion. The Robbie Robertson Native-rock influence is heard on several of the moodier arrangements, such as "I Know I Don't Walk on Water" and the "When It Comes." Strongest of all, "Cherokee Rose" is a powerful anthem and sister to the title cut on Emmylou Harris and Linda Ronstadt's Western Wall: The Tucson Sessions. "When Love Was All We Knew" is over the top and a little too much like a Coca-Cola commercial, and the overall listening experience would benefit from more warmth and grit in the production. --Paige La Grone
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