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Los Lobos - Ride (2004)
Posted By :
devil666r
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Date :
06 Feb 2010 04:34:00
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Comments :
1
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Los Lobos - Ride (2004)
Flac (tracks), no CUE, no LOG | TT: 64:42 | 411 MB Rar | Artwork
Label: Fontana-Mammoth / Genre: Blues Rock / Ripped with JetAudio
After hitting a creative peak in the early '90s, Los Lobos settled into a decade-long groove that was perhaps a little too comfortable. The band's twelfth studio CD, The Ride, tries to shake things up a bit, and mostly succeeds by pairing the group with a string of collaborators similar to Carlos Santana's Supernatural. Only instead of the young hit-makers that propelled Santana's comeback, The Ride matches Los Lobos with early influences (Bobby Womack, Little Willie G) and long-time friends (Dave Alvin, Elvis Costello).
Tracks
1. La Venganza de Los Pelados - featuring Cafe Tacuba
2. Rita
3. Is This All There Is? - featuring Little Willie G.
4. Charmed
5. Somewhere In Time - featuring Dave Alvin
6. Wicked Rain/Across 110th Street - featuring Bobby Womack
7. Kitate - featuring Tom Waits and Martha Gonzales
8. Hurry Tomorrow
9. Ya Se Va - featuring Ruben Blades
10. Wreck Of The Carlos Rey - featuring Richard Thompson
11. Matter Of Time - featuring Elvis Costello
12. Someday - featuring Mavis Staples
13. Chains Of Love
The experimentalism that fueled 1992's Kiko can be found here on a couple of tracks--most notably "Kitate," a deliriously wiggy collaboration with Tom Waits and Martha Gonzales of Quetzal--but generally the focus is on blues, soul, and roots rock. Surprisingly, some of the strongest performances are new versions of songs previously recorded by Lobos: Costello helps the band re-invent "Matter of Time" as a piano and pedal-steel guitar ballad; Mavis Staples turns the folk-blues lament of "Someday" into rousing Stax soul/gospel; and Womack segues effortlessly from "Wicked Rain" into his '70s blaxploitation classic, "Across 110th Street." Of the newer material, the band shines brightest on "La Venganza de Los Pelados," a Latin dance workout with Café Tacuba, and the bluesy soul of "Chains of Love," which shreds 12-bar formula by including a 90-second violin solo. The latter is a tribute to '50s rock & rollers Don and Dewey, proving that the best road to the future is sometimes paved by revisiting the distant past. --Keith Moerer
Pass: pichu
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Posted By:
Laserman59
Date:
30 Mar 2010 04:51:26
Thank you Devil for this great share. :-)
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