Titles include "How Can You Keep On Moving", "FDR In Trinidad", "On A Monday", "Vigilante Man", "Taxes On The Farmer Feeds Us All", and "Billy The Kid". CD
RyCooder —
Jazz ... CD Warner, Mid 70s. Used ...
Out Of Stock
Arranged and conducted by Joseph Byrd. Titles include "Face To Face That I Shall Meet Him", "In A Mist", "Flashes", "Nobody", and "We Shall Be Happy". CD
Possible matches: 2
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Various —
No Nukes ... CD Asylum, 1979. Used 2CD ...
Out Of Stock
Features performances by the Doobie Brothers, Jackson Browne, Sweeth Honey In The Rock, James Taylor, Chaka Khan, Gil Scott-Heron, RyCooder, Bonnie Raitt, Tom Petty, Poco, Bruce Springsteen, and Crosby, Stills & Nash. CD
The jury is sometimes out on the Mick Jagger on-screen performance in the Nicolas Roeg film Performance – but the soundtrack is something pretty separate entirely, and really says a lot more about the spirit of late 60s Warner Brothers Records in LA than it does the arthouse cinema scene in England! The great Jack Nitzsche composed a number of instrumental tracks for the score – maybe his first time in this mode, and prefacing some later 70s successes to come – with titles that include "Rolls Royce & Acid", "Harry Flowers", and "Natural Magic". Other Warner talents get a hand in the music too – as Randy Newman conducted all of Nitzsche's charts, and also sings "Gone Dead Train" – while RyCooder delivers bottleneck solos on "Get Away" and "Powis Square". There's also some nice soul-based moments – the cut "Wake Up N*ggers" by The Last Poets, and "Poor White Hound Dog" and "Performance" by Merry Clayton. And yes, Mick does get to sing on one tune – the album's "Memo From Turner" – and the set is completed by Buffy St Marie work on "The Hashishin" and "Dead Dead Red". (Soundtracks, Rock)CD