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Mickey Newbury - I Came To Hear The Music album flac

Mickey Newbury - I Came To Hear The Music album flac Performer: Mickey Newbury
Title: I Came To Hear The Music
Released: 1974
MP3 album: 1780 mb
FLAC album: 1621 mb
Rating: 4.7
Other formats: FLAC XM WMA ADX AHX VQF APE
Genre: Folk and Country

Columbia, Santa Maria pressing. Recorded and remixed at Youngun Sound, Murfreesboro, Tenn. Thanks to WMTS Radio - Murfreesboro, Tenn. Special Thanks to Jack Seckel.

Throughout the '70s, Newbury continued producing albums that were critically acclaimed for their unique, mysterious atmosphere and poetic songs, such as Live at Montezuma Hall (1973), Heaven Help the Child (1973), and I Came to Hear the Music (1974). However, his albums did not sell much, in part because of their eclecticism and Newbury's growing disdain for the music business, especially in Nashville.

Mickey Newbury was part of the legion of Texas singer-songwriters that greatly expanded the format of country music. He wrote a number of hits for country-pop singers before releasing his first solo work, Harlequin Melodies (RCA, 1968), which was followed by his masterpiece, Looks Like Rain (1969). Frisco Mabel Joy (1971) contains his most successful recording, the American Trilogy. Heaven Help the Child (1973) concluded his creative phase, as I Came To Hear The Music (Elektra, 1974) and Lovers (Elektra, 1975) were vastly inferior. He died in 2002 of emphysema. An American Trilogy (Drag City,.

Comfort - Second Spring Maurice & Mac - Lean On Me Mickey Hart - Rolling Thunder Mickey Newbury - Frisco Mabel Joy Mickey Newbury - I Came To Hear The Music Mickey Newbury - Harlequin Melodies Mickey Newbury - Heaven Help The Child Mickey Newbury - Live At Montezuma Hall Mickey Newbury - Looks Like Rain Mike Bloomfield - It's Not Killing Me Moby Grape - 20 Granite Creek Moby Grape - Moby Grape Moby.

The fifth album from the Chicago-born pianist Andrew Hill catapulted him to the top tier of forward-looking jazz composers of the ’60s. As Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane pioneered jazz’s New Thing movement, loosening the shackles of long-established chord progressions, Hill’s tight-knit pieces played within them, drawing on post-bop, avant-garde, and the blues. The album is by no means easy listening; the atonality is unrepentant. But Taylor’s septet finds numerous gorgeous spaces as they interpret free jazz not just as the freedom to improvise but the freedom to invent musical worlds and hidden syntaxes. Here, Newbury accompanies his songs of unbearable heartbreak with acoustic guitar, but he also couches them in church choirs and sitar, as well as the sounds of chimes, rain, and distant trains, creating a singular album that might best be described as ambient country.

Written by Mickey and included on his classic Frisco Mabel Joy record. Song was later recorded by Roy Orbison. Would you believe I first found Mickey Newbury's "I just came to hear the music" album many years ago on a second hand table outside a record store. It was the greatest find I ever made I have never stopped listening to Mickey's music since. it is the pleasure of my life. about 4 years ago. horrorskopf. To me Mickey's music has become a part of myself for the last 40 years. The day I got Internet one of the first things for me to google was Mickey Newbury, - when I learned that Mickey had died the night before. Skip.