Robert Plant and Alison Krauss - Raising Sand - CD
CD and Case are in as new condition with NO scratches...Item ships within 1 day of receipt of payment.
Track listing 1. Rich Woman 2. Killing The Blues 3. Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us 4. Polly Come Home 5. Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On) 6. Through The Morning, Through The Night 7. Please Read The Letter 8. Trampled Rose 9. Fortune Teller 10. Stick With Me Baby 11. Nothin' 12. Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson 13. Your Long Journey
 |  |  | | Additional Information about Raising Sand * Portions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2008 Muze Inc. All rights reserved.
| Track listing | No track list available 1. Rich Woman 2. Killing The Blues 3. Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us 4. Polly Come Home 5. Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On) 6. Through The Morning, Through The Night 7. Please Read The Letter 8. Trampled Rose 9. Fortune Teller 10. Stick With Me Baby 11. Nothin' 12. Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson 13. Your Long Journey
| | Details | | Playing time: | 57 min. | | Producer: | T-Bone Burnett | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording type: | Studio | | Recording mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
| | Album notes | Those who find the pairing of '70s rock god Robert Plant with contemporary bluegrass queen Alison Krauss unlikely have probably not been paying attention to Plant's latter-day work, which is full of intimate, acoustic-flavored balladry. While the organic-sounding, low-key Plant/Krauss collaboration, RAISING SAND, is a far cry from Led Zeppelin's stadium rock, it offers up some hauntingly moody textures that should appeal to "Battle of Evermore" admirers. Consisting mostly of sagely chosen cover tunes, the album finds Plant and Krauss bringing their warm-but-eerie harmonies to everything from Townes Van Zandt's nihilistic folk poetry ("Nothin'") to the crumbled beauty of latter-day Tom Waits ("Trampled Rose"). Determined not to rest on their laurels or cater to expectations, the 59-year-old icon and his junior partner craft a subtle and intriguing sound built on their shared love of folk forms and gift for interpretation, bringing to light esoteric gems by late Byrds visionary Gene Clark and the Everly Brothers along the way as well.
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| | The seller, polo9294, assumes full responsibility for the content of this listing and the item offered.
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