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Our product to treat is a regular product. There is not the imitation. From Japan by the surface mail because is sent out, take it until arrival as 7-14 day. Thank you for you seeing it.
B**S
Excellent! Love all the tracks
Bought this after seeing him on Jools Holland Show. Excellent! Love all the tracks:)
M**9
A true family band
Excellent music
M**B
Five Stars
Best record In a long time ... Fab buy
K**K
Five Stars
Fine cd
G**N
Pedal Power
This is a funked-up, lively offering. Opener 'Amped Up' is self-explanatory, and has delightful echoes of Prince in its excitement, whilst second 'Born Again' begins with superlative bass lines and Randolf's pedal steel before launching into another echo, this time holding up a melodic mirror as it runs along the lines of Stephen Still's 'Love The One Your With' and awaits, presumably, the serving of a plagiarism writ. Third 'New Orleans' mixes an Hawaiian tinge into the pedal steel whilst adding injections of rap, and the eclecticism is established.Fourth 'Take the Party' is perhaps more New Orleans in overall sound than its predecessor with those horns, vocal shouts and soulful chorus, but it is Randolf's scorching pedal steel that whips and wheels about most distinctively. The most funked-up funked-up track is fifth 'Brand New Wayo' which is more instrumental than most, and not surprisingly as it features a blistering duet with Carlos Santana as well as virtuoso bass from Danyel Morgan.There's more from Carlos on 'Black Joe', a slower track where the fire is oddly doused by the blandness of the melody and the dirge of the singing. A strange aberration continued, unfortunately, in repetitive follower 'Love Rollercoaster' where the empathetic heights are not attained.Ninth 'All American' returns strongly again in Prince mode. Tenth 'Get Ready' is Randolf's pedal steel assailing that instrument's and his playing's impressive heights, segueing into and out again from a gospel interjection. Superb. Penultimate 'Welcome Home' has some beautiful soul singing with harmony, and the pedal steel whirls around within to weave that traditional sound to its own distinctiveness. The album closes on The Rascal's 'Good Lovin'', a great song given an appropriate upbeat performance and sounding so similar to 'Born Again' which sounds like - well, you know - it has got me wondering if Stills was ever or should still be looking over his own mirroring shoulder.
A**E
Album in search of an identity
It's growing on me but feels a bit confused, as opposed to varied. Had moments of beauty and, if you like 80's funk, a few excellent tracks. Needs to be played on decent sound system - played on small inexpensive system the mix sounded bad, on a good one unrecognisably better.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 month ago