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Music CD - Uncle Tupelo: March 16-20, 1992

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Music CD: March 16-20, 1992 Artist: Uncle Tupelo
List Price: $11.98
Our Price: $6.98
Your Save: $ 5.00 ( 42% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sony
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Grindstone 2. Coalminers 3. Wait Up 4. Criminals 5. Shaky Ground 6. Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down 7. Black Eye 8. Moonshiner 9. I Wish My Baby Was Born 10. Atomic Power 11. Lilli Schull 12. Warfare 13. Fatal Wound 14. Sandusky 15. Wipe The Clock 16. Take My Word (Bonus Track) 17. Grindstone (1991 Longview Farm Acoustic Demo) (Bonus Track) 18. Atomic Power (1991 Longview Farm Acoustic Demo) (Bonus Track) 19. I Wanna Be Your Dog (1991 Longview Farm Acoustic Demo) (Bonus Track) 20. Moonshiner (Live 1/24/1993) (Bonus Track)
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0696998642621 Format: Extra tracks Label: Sony Manufacturer: Sony Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Sony Release Date: 2003-04-15 Studio: Sony
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: a great cd. Comment: country/rock/folk, whatever. this is such a fantastic recording. not a dud song in the lot. great singing, great songs. i call this an american classic.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A classic album Comment: No doubt this is the coming together of two brilliant musicians at a moment in time which has produced the most brilliant album which has clearly started a movement. Every song is brilliant. Sensational buy this before any other alt country album its the best
Customer Rating:      Summary: American and Essential Comment: This is a fine roots album if ever there was one. Before Wilco, before Son Volt, there was Uncle Tupelo. And of all the Uncle Tupelo discs, this, in my mind, stands supreme. The songs alternate vocals between Jeff Tweedy and Jar Farrar. Farrar, in his preacher's baritone, tends to sing more politically oriented songs, songs of the early twentieth century, socialist songs focusing on coal miners unionizing or the ills of capitalism on the small man. Farrar's version of Moonshiner is like a priceless relic suspended in amber. Tweedy (his voice sounds younger and more contemporary than Farrar) also tackles some good old Americana in "I wish my Baby was Born" and "Satan, Your Kingdom must Come Down." Overall Tweedy leans more toward the personal and emotional while Farrar seems more comfortable with traditional ballads. Most of the songs are traditional tunes - folk songs, blues songs, spirituals. The guitar work is strong, with both men playing acoustic to fill out the sound. On some songs there are mandolin and violin - but it's really an acoustic guitar driven record. The band does a superb job of capturing the timelessness of the older music, and does well to blend their tunes with such a venerable canon. This is folk music as it was meant to be - raw, intense, masculine, topical. There is nothing cheesy on this record - and "Atomic Power" is probably the standout cut on the disc. Buy this music - you won't be disappointed - I guarantee!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Do not miss this one Comment: If you are looking for one of the best Alt Country / Americana (whatever those are) CDs ever created this is it. Look no further. These guys were the masters of it. With so much crap on the radio, its nice to look back in time and find some real gems if you are willing to branch out and spend some $$. This album will lead you to buy CDs from Son Volt, Wilco, and Jay solo. A must for the critical music lover.
Customer Rating:      Summary: definitely my favorite uncle tupelo album Comment: The other three Uncle Tupelo albums each have some good songs, but don't really hold together that well as records. "March" does, beautifully. Recording at a crossroads in music history when underground bands were getting mainstream radio airplay, Uncle Tupelo's popularity might have exploded if they had stayed where they were for "Still Feel Gone." This is one case, however, where you'd rather not think about the might-have-beens, as this album, all acoustic and roughly half traditional folk covers, is one of the rare albums that nearly defines "rocking." Tweedy is at his finest with the simple, sadly meditative "Black Eye," and Farrar contributes "Criminals," a song with a social conscience that manages to not seem dated. The folk songs are all beautiful, and the instrumental "Sandusky" is flawlessly executed. Though recorded in the short span of time noted in the album title with only acoustic instruments, this album manages at once to be timeless and to be eminently of its own time.
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Editorial Reviews:
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After ripping it up on No Depression and Still Feel Gone, their first two albums of twangy punk rock, Uncle Tupelo unplugged for this remarkable tribute--half originals, half political and religious covers--to the band's old-time influences. While the new songs of frontmen Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy are consistently strong here (especially Farrar's "Grindstone"), the album's haunted covers of old folk songs are the true keepers. Tweedy's apocalyptic version of "Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down" and Farrar's earnest readings of the beat-down "Moonshiner" and the labor song "Coalminers" are as frightening, beautiful, and passionate as anything the band ever recorded. The 2003 expanded and remastered edition adds three unreleased demos, a live version of "Moonshiner," and an instrumental B-side. --David Cantwell
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