Product Description Steal This Disc // 1. You Won't Let Me Go - Josh White Jr. with Robin Batteau 2. I Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody's Home - Johnny Adams 3. G-spot Tornado - Frank Zappa 4. Good Thing Going - Sugar Minott 5. Something Spiritual - Mahavishnu John McLaughlin 6. Wild Horses - Old & In The Way 7. Moose The Mooche - Phil Woods with Chris Swanson 8. Madison Blues - George Thorogood & The Destroyers 9. Serenade For Misty - The Residents 10.B-Boy Rhyme & Riddle - Schoolly D 11.Home Is Where The Heart Is - The Red Clay Ramblers 12.Henry & James - Dave Stewart & Barbara Gaskin 13. Jubilee Stomp - Guy Van Duser & Billy Novick 14. Jerkin' Back 'n Forth - Devo 15. Size 10 1/2 Sneaks - Bill Frisell & Vernon Reid 16. Once In A Very Blue Moon - Nanci Griffith 17. Flight Home - Mark O'Connor 18. If Not For You - Richie Havens 19. Hesitation Blues - Doc & Merle Watson 20. Fire - Jimi Hendrix 21. Hello Skinny - The Residents
Customer Reviews:
All mixed up- Acute disresonance, but some real gems here.June 1, 2008 John Lewis(Dallas, TX USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This could be described as an unpopular pop music sampler. This is for people who like to stretch their boundaries a little, and cannot find anything now on FM radio they like. It starts out rather subdued the first few tracks. I tend to skip through some of those. But in the middle it really picks up beginning with a great Zappa instrumental and a wonderful George Thorogood blues song- Madison Blues. Then followed by some more good eclectic music. Hello Skinny by the Residents is wonderfully weird, as is the raunchy rap song by B-Boy Rhime and Riddle which is very funny but violent as is sometimes typical with these. An excellent Devo instrumental is here. Near the end is a rare Duet with Doc Watson and Merl Watson. You may be skipping around some of these, but don't miss the real jewels like this. Some decent old-style country and other strange stuff. Most of it quite worth a listen. This is one of the last of the pre-internet music samplers, and one of the best from the late 1980s.