 |
Free Music Notes for Them ChangesFree Music Review: RIP to a Great talent Hit: 5 Starsthe album cover says it all because if you have ever listen to Buddy Miles playing and singing then you know he brought a change and he could Groove and was versatile on so much. if you have his work with Jimi Hendrix on the Band of Gypsys Project then you know the cat was truly Bad. this collection has so much musical stylings and yet Buddy Miles keeps it downhome and never loses the pocket of Groove. his voice booms and is as commanding as was his drumming skills. He was something else and hasn't gotten his full due.
Free Music Review: Buddy Miles/Them Changes Hit: 5 StarsI first bought the LP back in the 70's (and still have it) and was blown away by it's funkiness. The only problem with the original album was the sound quality. The horns especially were over modulated to the point of hurtin' the ear drums! Even Buddy's voice sounded scratchy on a few cuts but the sound on the cd is so clear without any sound quality loss at all! So after years of searching I found it on Amazon and it was worth the wait!!
Free Music Review: rare find Hit: 5 StarsI was shocked when my search for the Buddy Miles "Them Changes" album actually came back with a remastered CD. The quality is really good for an overseas version and the songs just can't get any better...
Free Music Review: Them changes "Buddy Miles" Hit: 5 StarsThe CD was Excellent, sound was out of this world, and the shipment was very fast.
Free Music Review: Therapy for the Rhythmically Challenged Hit: 5 StarsGo ahead, but with caution, when a parent is reminiscent upon their own rock history. For years I've heard my mom talk about "the Buddy Miles concert." The other day I grabbed this and a copy for dear old mom, put it on in the car and tempted the windows to burst. If you listen to the title track you will have either heard it, think you have heard it before, or wish you had heard it sooner. Subject matter goes from loving a woman, to shooting one, but there's no denying the groove, the horns, the funk, the soul, the rock. Former drummer for Hendrix, on "Electric Ladyland" in Band of Gypsy's, and before that even with Wilson Pickett, the man is no foreigner to an overdriven guitar or a battery of brass. He wields both with knowledge and intensity which will render your public shame helpless as you rock your car at stoplights and all point between. What to do with one's body in the presence of such funk is the common foreign language experience for the rhythmically challenged everywhere. But I will struggle with the lapbelt as often as this disc is in the tray.
More Free Music Notes: 1 2 3
|
 |
|
|
|