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Gatorhythms | 
enlarge | Artist: Marcia Ball Label: Rounder / Umgd Category: Music
List Price: $17.98 Buy Used: $4.24 You Save: $13.74 (76%)
New (35) Used (23) Collectible (1) from $4.24
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 116679
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 613101 UPC: 011661310124 EAN: 0011661310124 ASIN: B00000034K
Release Date: June 20, 1989 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Next Day Shipping, Comes With Original Disc, Artworks, and Case. The Disc is Like New. All APO, FPO, PO BOX, and INTERNATIONAL BUYERS Are Welcome. Fast First Class International Shipping. Money Back And Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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| Tracks:
| • | How You Carry On - Marcia Ball, Rebennack, Mac | | • | La Ti Da | | • | The Power of Love | | • | Mobile | | • | Find Another Fool | | • | Mama's Cooking | | • | What's a Girl to Do? - Marcia Ball, Parnell, Lee Roy | | • | Daddy Said | | • | You'll Come Around | | • | Red Hot - Marcia Ball, Parnell, Lee Roy |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com A mainstay of the festival circuit and blues clubs, Marcia Ball is a captivating performer and a one-woman ambassador for the south Louisiana sound she loves. This, her third Rounder album, dates from 1989. It's a mostly self-composed program that doesn't quite capture the joy of her live shows, but comes close at times. Of all the new songs, "The Power of Love" is best. It's a beautifully poised performance that grows slowly and inexorably from a two-minute vocal-piano intro. Some of the songs are built around the mournful swamp-pop chord changes; others around Cajun two-steps. The album closes with country star LeRoy Parnell's "Red Hot," which has since become one of her show-closers. --Colin Escott
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| Customer Reviews:
Not what I expected April 16, 2008 Richard H. Moodybuddy (Key West) I heard from Marcia on a Blues webcast.I bought 3 of her albums including her Live Down the Road. It was mainly based on a single review on the album page." Great sax on the many solos".. That sax man is awful. Bad notes, phrasing, and amature style. Gator rhythms was not what I expected either. Marcia is a terrific talent we saw in Bay St Louis some time back before the town was blown away. These Albums miss the mark. sorry.
$18.00 for 34:11 of music is a huge rip off! March 17, 2007 Austin Guy (Austin, TX USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I like Marcia Ball and love her music. I see her around town now and then and have gone to many of her local gigs. However, eighteen bucks for 34 minutes of music is a nasty rip off. Folks, that is worse than a cheaply mastered LP! Rounder (more like Bounder) records conveniently neglects to list a total time, or track times, on the exterior packaging so you have to open the package before you learn you've just been seriously gouged and it's too late to take it back then. It's companies like Rounder that are driving the various sorts of music piracy.
Music With Soul December 27, 2006 S. Barrett (San Bernardino, CA) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
There's something haunting and envigorating about her style. Even though you can get lost in her vocals don't forget her piano playing, which is second to none. She's just a true musician.
An excellent early album March 8, 2003 Peter Durward Harris (Leicester England) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
On this set, Marcia demonstrates her skills on a variety of songs, beginning with How to carry on, an up-tempo rocker, which sees her attacking the piano in a manner reminiscent of Jerry Lee Lewis. There's nothing else quite like that here, but there is a nice mix of tempos. The mood of the album is generally upbeat.The power of love is her own song - of course, there have been many songs with this title - I've come across about ten totally different songs. The most famous was the one that was a huge hit all over Europe in the eighties for Jennifer Rush. It was a flop in America, but later became an American hit for Laura Branigan, then in the nineties it became a monster hit for Celine Dion. Marcia's song is not as dramatic, but it is still a great song. Mama's cooking explains in song why Marcia manages to avoid getting fat - she could eat plenty, but always burn off the excess by dancing the night away. The cover picture provides the proof. Lee Roy Parnell, who eventually achieved success as a country singer in the nineties, wrote two of the songs but he was unknown at the time this music was recorded. What's a girl to do and Red hot show that he could write great songs. Marcia's music should appeal to anybody who likes rock music with a touch of blues, particularly fans of Bonnie Raitt.
First rate December 28, 1999 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is the best of the cds put out by Marcia Ball and I recommend it highly. The performances on other Ball cds is equally good, but the quality of the songwriting on this one sets it apart from the rest. (I realize 4 stars around here amounts to damning with faint praise, but geez, there ought to be some shades of gray between the ridiculous and the sublime).
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