![]() Close seconds are her plaintiff "Try Me Again"(one of my favs to sing in the shower, what a great hook in the bridge!), the powerfully sad "Down So Low" and the touching "Lo Siento Mi Vida". Ronstadt injects just the right amount of pathos and heartbreak into the track and gives it a nice simplicity mixed with moments of extreme vocal power. The highlight is easily the wonderful "Lose Again" written by Karla Bonoff. As eclectic as she tries to be, she seems to produce her best work when she is singing something simple and original. The flaws are never in her vocal work, but rather, in her inability to emotionally connect with some of the material. She even tries (not entirely successfully) to cover Buddy Holly ("That'll Be The Day") and Patsy Cline ("Crazy"). Linda sings everything from country-rock to pop to soul to reggae with admitedly mixed results. Her vocal range is stunning and the song choices on this disc seem hell-bent on stretching that range as much as possible. Customers Rating :Īlthough this may not be most people's favorite Linda Ronstadt album, I have a particular fondness for it, mostly because it was the first entire Linda album I ever listened to from start to finish in one sitting. Ronstadt has explored many musical styles in her career, and HASTEN is no exception, as country, rock, pop, Spanish music and reggae come together to form a winner. Linda does a powerful and searing rendition of Patsy Cline's "Crazy," as her soprano sheds new light on an old classic. Ronstadt goes the Jamaican route with "Give One Heart," a reggae love song. The title track is a ballad written by Warren Zevon and features fellow Californian Don Henley on harmony vocals. Linda decides it's time to rock out with a kickin' version of Buddy Holly's "That'll Be The Day."Ronstadt delves into Spanish territory with "Lo Siento Mi Vida," a beautiful acoustic number. "Lose Again" is a country rock ballad written by Karla Bonoff. It's a very real, raw album with Ronstadt's sweet vocals pierced by a touch of grit. It also garnered her a Grammy for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. Note: the text of this song's lyrics is not under the same copyright license as the wiki's encyclopedic text, it is used under fair use/ dealing.Description : Personnel: Linda Ronstadt (vocals, hand claps) Dan Dugmore (electric & steel guitars) Charles Veal (violin, viola) Ken Yerke (violin) Paul Polivnick (viola) Dennis Karmazyn (cello) Richard Feves (acoustic bass) Kenny Edwards (bass, mandolin, background vocals) Russ Kunkel, Michael Botts (drums) Peter Asher (percussion) Herb Pederson, Becci Louis, Pat Henderson, Sherlie Matthews, Gerry Garrett, Jim Gilstrap, Clydie King, Ron Hickland (background vocals).HASTEN DOWN THE WIND was a number three smash and Ronstadt's first million- selling disc. Linda Ronstadt covered the song and used the title for her 1976 album Hasten Down the Wind. Jackson Browne, producer of the song's debut album, has stated that it is one of his favourite songs of all time. A strings version is on Dad Get Me Out Of This: The String Quartet Tribute To Warren Zevon. ![]() The song is also available in sheet form in The Warren Zevon Guitar Songbook. It is also featured on the live albums Learning to Flinch and the 2007 reissue of Stand in the Fire. The song appears on the compilation albums I'll Sleep When I'm Dead (An Anthology) and Genius: The Best of Warren Zevon. ![]() It is one of Zevon's more tender songs, even if dealing with such an unhappy relationship. His perception of her personality has changed so much since they met that he can't find the woman he loved, and is only hanging on to half her heart. ![]() In response she says that she would actually rather be with him, but the man comes to realize that this is only her way to keep him on the limb. In the end he comes to agree, she needs to be free. She tells him that "she thinks she needs to be free", a euphemism for leaving him, noting that the relationship does not seem to be really working out. ![]() The song describes a man's turbulent relationship with a woman. "Hasten Down the Wind" is a song from Warren Zevon's 1976 self-titled album. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |