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Music CD - Ray LaMontagne: Trouble

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Music CD: Trouble Artist: Ray LaMontagne
List Price: $13.98
Our Price: $6.36
Your Save: $ 7.62 ( 55% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: RCA
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Trouble 2. Shelter 3. Hold You In My Arms 4. Narrow Escape 5. Burn 6. Forever My Friend 7. Hannah 8. How Come 9. Jolene 10. All The Wild Horses
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0828766345926 Label: RCA Manufacturer: RCA Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: RCA Release Date: 2004-09-14 Studio: RCA
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Trouble Comment: This is a great album. From 'Trouble' to 'Shelter' to 'How Come,' I am just blown away by all the tracks.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Ted Hawkins rip-off Comment: Just got the CD today in the mail. Rushed to work and popped it in the office player. Within minutes all the laughing people were depressed and the sun just wasn't shining as brightly as before. A true downer.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Would not purchase from this seller again Comment: I did not end up receiving my order although I did receive a refund. I would not order from this seller again.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Music Doesn't Get Any Better Than This Comment: While this CD is not a new release, it is a definite must have for any collection. I feel certain it is Ray's finest, but it also happens to be one of my all-time favorite CD's! Every time I have this playing, someone asks who the artist is...what the song is...if it's a new CD... His throaty/husky voice stands in contrast to the gentle, flowing melodies, and the tracks all have the feel of a personal and private living room performance. The most wonderful part of it is that EVERY TRACK IS GREAT.
Customer Rating:      Summary: get blown away Comment: I was just starting to believe I'd never be emotionally devastated by an album again. I kept listening to my old Joni Mitchell & Cat Stevens,
wondering why nothing recent or new was making me feel anything. I thought it meant I was getting old. I had come to dread shopping because of the piped in "music" - I can't bear it. I'd turn on the radio and shake my head in bewilderment. Anyway, it is a crime that few people have heard of Ray LaMontagne. It is a total fluke that I came to own this fantastic album - I saw a clip of Susan Tedeschi singing a song called, "Shelter" and I couldn't breathe. I had to know who wrote the song.
Long story later, this CD gets popped into my mailbox curtesy of Amazon. I put it on the stereo and everyone in the room fell silent. Even my kids, and they never shut up. This is a voice that comes along once in a generation - he reminds me a bit of Otis Redding; he has a nice rasp, as though his vocal chords are coated in dust. I can't say enough about him -
his singing gives me chills, his lyrics bring tears to my eyes. What joy this single human being has given me.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Some singer/songwriters (think Paul Westerberg and Elliott Smith) develop their world-weariness through the unforgiving trials of passing years and the heart-breaking grind of the music business. Others (Van Morrison, Neil Young) seem to have sprung from out of nowhere with the fully formed soul of a life well-lived. Ray LaMontagne belongs with the latter. On this, his debut, LaMontagne has crafted a handful of quietly devastating meditations on life and love--and delivered them with a raspy vocal all his own. The simple, mournful lyrics of "Burn," "Shelter" and the title track recall a Hank Williams ballad, and the reserved production by alt-country/americana genius Ethan Johns (the Jayhawks, Ryan Adams, Kings of Leon) make this a great disc for smoky Saturday nights, and rainy Sunday mornings. --Ben Heege
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