|
|
Music CD - Jack Johnson: Brushfire Fairytales

|
Music CD: Brushfire Fairytales Artist: Jack Johnson
List Price: $13.98
Our Price: $9.45
Your Save: $ 4.53 ( 32% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Umvd Labels
|
Average Customer Rating:     

|
|
Tracks:
|
1. Inaudible Melodies 2. Middle Man 3. Posters 4. Sexy Plexi 5. Flake 6. Bubble Toes 7. Fortunate Fool 8. The News 9. Drink the Water 10. Mudfootball 11. F-Stop Blues 12. Losing Hope 13. It's All Understood
|
|
|
Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0042286099422 Label: Umvd Labels Manufacturer: Umvd Labels Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Umvd Labels Release Date: 2002-01-29 Studio: Umvd Labels
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: wonderful Comment: Jack Johnson is great! It is a good mellow sound, not too hard rock. If you like good mellow music, go for this cd!
Customer Rating:      Summary: The most popular whisperer Comment: This stuff could potentially groove if they had a singer with more vocal presence (doesn't whisper his way through the tunes). Either way, IMO, it's good stuff that has yet to be realized by a better singer. I'm just not feeling it. Almost Damien Rice, but not as eclectic/quirky....just one person's opinion, try to be objective.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great CD Comment: Although this is his first or one of his first cds, it is one of his best. It's typical Jack Johnson!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Perfect Comment: I like this music. Perfect for what I need it for. Teaching college students a fitness class. In great condition
Customer Rating:      Summary: Can actually listen to the whole CD Comment: I have yet to hear a JJ CD that I can't listen to. This one is no exception.
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
Fans of Willy Porter, Ben Harper, and G. Love will all want to check out Jack Johnson's engaging folk- and blues-inflected pop. Born in Oahu, Hawaii, Johnson, a former surfer and film-school graduate, has a knack for acoustic ballads whose calm surfaces hide a subtle but strong lyrical undertow. "It seems to me that 'maybe' pretty much always means 'no,'" sings Johnson on "Flake," which features crony Harper on slide guitar. Production by J.P. Plunier (who also handles Harper's recordings) is simple and uncluttered: acoustic guitar and drum tracks share the foreground with Johnson's easygoing vocals, which evoke everyone from G. Love (who recorded Johnson's "Rodeo Clowns" on his Philadelphonic album) to Nick Drake to Willy Porter. And while Johnson may not have Porter's guitar chops, these songs have a relaxed beauty and understated depth that reward repeated listening. --Bill Forman
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|