Unbroken Discography Blogspot



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Please let me know what I'm missing, as I'm sure there's a ton of releases from bands on this blog I either missed or completely forgot about. Let me know what your favourite albums of 2020 have been, and I'll have my usual top 50 list out later this month. I also just wanted to quickly mention that right now I'm focusing on new releases only. All info (my blogs, links, updating info etc.) will be used as sooner on original blog. On new address will be only new (and reworked) files and archive of new blog. 4 STOP LABEL - HELP Can somebody help with info on two album released on Stop label in early 1970s - LP 1021 and LP 1030 (artist, title, tracks, release year - any info welcome). This is my attempt at a complete and detailed Vinyl Discography of the '90s Hardcore band Unbroken. I'm in no way affiliated with the band. Just a collector nerd who's way passionate about their music, lyrics and artwork. For some, though, Bruford’s new album will be the first introduction to the drummer as a bonafide jazz artist, partly by association with his seasoned jazz bandmates. “In a funny kind of way, I think I am coming full circle here,” Bruford says. “I started with jazz and had a long, prolific time fronting something called art-rock. Looking for Demi Lovato - Unbroken? Visit Decluttr for great deals and super savings with FREE shipping today!

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While this third volume couldn't possibly be the ground-breaking release that was 1972's initial 'Circle,' it wears the legacy well. Thirty years down-the-line, the Dirt Band are no longer the eager young turks of 1972, nor is this sort of inter-generational tribute to roots a new concept. In the decades since the first 'Circle,' what was once novel is now more commonplace, and though the familiarity doesn't lessen the quality or value of the music, it does lessen its impact.
In addition to the Dirt Band, the first 'Circle' is reprised in the playing and singing of Jimmy Martin, Earl Scruggs, Doc Watson and Vassar Clements. Notably missing are Roy Acuff, Merle Travis and Mother Maybelle, though the latter two are celebrated in song -- Travis by Doc Watson's recitation of 'I Am a Pilgrim,' and Carter by Johnny Cash's newly-penned 'Tears in the Holston River.'
The historical resonance that's been lost to the passing of legends is renewed by several family gatherings, including performances from Del, Robbie and Ronnie McCoury, Doc and Richard Watson, John and Jonathan McCuen (the former of whom only recently returned after an extended absence from the Dirt Band's lineup), Jeff and Jaime Hanna, and Jimmy and Ray Martin. The passing of the torch, first from Nashville's pioneers to a new generation, and now from that generation to it's children, shows the Circle to really be a link in a chain.
The 'new blood' on this volume features established stars like Alison Krauss, Jerry Douglas, Vince Gill, Dwight Yoakam and Tom Petty. A few lesser-known (but no less talented) artists, Iris Dement and songwriter Matraca Berg, are joined by legends Taj Mahal, Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson and Johnny Cash. It's a fine lineup of talent, but their careers (often built directly in opposition to the Nashvillization of country music), not to mention their familiarity with the first two 'Circle' volumes, lend this set a somewhat self-conscious air.
Dwight Yoakam's tilled similar soil on his solo albums, consequently his contributions sound as much like Dwight Yoakam as they do back-to-the-roots 'Circle' inventions (not that this is a bad thing, of course). Petty is mostly superfluous duetting with Willie Nelson on 'Goodnight Irene,' but Berg, who's best known for her songwriting (e.g., Deana Carter's 'Strawberry Wine), gets a chance to show off a rootsy side that's only sporadically made it onto her solo efforts. Her duet with Emmylou Harris (on Berg's own 'Oh Cumberland') is a highlight, as are Vince Gill's gospel 'All Prayed Up' and Taj Mahal's 'Fishin' Blues.'
In a year that's seen a deluxe reissue of the first 'Circle' album, volume three can't help but pale slightly in comparison. But taken on its own, this is a fine album of singing and song, one that heeds (if not really expands upon) the first set's principles.