Showing posts with label A.J. Croce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A.J. Croce. Show all posts

Saturday, February 6, 2021

A.J. Croce - By Request

Size: 90.9 MB
Time: 38:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2021
Styles: Blues, Rock, Soul
Art: Front

01. Nothing From Nothing (3:32)
02. Only Love Can Break Your Heart (3:31)
03. Have You Seen My Baby (2:28)
04. Nothing Can Change This Love (2:44)
05. Better Day (Feat. Robben Ford) (2:13)
06. Ooh Child (3:25)
07. Stay With Me (3:00)
08. Brickyard Blues (4:12)
09. San Diego Serenade (2:58)
10. Sail On Sailor (3:50)
11. Can't Nobody Love You (2:53)
12. Ain't No Justice (4:02)

Over the past three decades, A.J. Croce has established his rep as a piano man and serious vocal stylist who pulls from a host of American traditions and anti-heroes — it’s part New Orleans, part juke joint, part soul. While his last album, JUST LIKE MEDICINE, paired him with soul legend Dan Penn and an all-star cast of players, his new album was born of memories — of favorite artists and shows, but mostly, of late-night gatherings with groups of friends, many of them fellow musicians, with Croce at the piano taking requests. Croce revisits these musical evenings with BY REQUEST, 12 personally curated covers that traverse decades and genres, propelled by his spirited, loose-and-easy piano mastery and emotive vocals. It’s a tribute to Croce the music fan as well as Croce the musician that both the variety — from pop to RnR to soul — and execution is inspired, aided by a full band and horns. BY REQUEST is the first album Croce has released since losing his wife of 24 years, Marlo Croce, after a sudden heart ailment.

From sharing an obscurity by Motown artist Shorty Long, “Ain’t No Justice,” to his funky, dead-on version of Billy Preston’s “Nothing from Nothing,” Croce keeps the virtual party hopping. While he delivers faithful recreations of such nuggets as The Five Stairsteps’ “Ooh Ooh Child” and Allen Toussaint’s “Brickyard Blues,” he puts his own spin on piano-driven arrangements of songs by Neil Young, The Beach Boys, Sam Cooke, The Faces and more. Young’s “Only Love Can Break Your Heart” is re-interpreted as a gospel song, and The Beach Boys’ “Sail On Sailor” becomes a trippy, rollicking ride. Although he lost his famous father, music legend Jim Croce, when he was just two years old, he pays tribute by covering Randy Newman’s “Have You Seen My Baby” since the first show he attended was a bill featuring his dad and Newman. Croce, says, “I love so much of his music, and while this is by no means my favorite of his, it’s been a request at soirĂ©es. I sort of treated it as if Little Richard sat in with The Flaming Groovies and played it like I was 15, with reckless abandon.”

By Request MP3
By Request FLAC

Thursday, September 17, 2015

A.J. Croce - That's Me In The Bar (20th Anniversary Edition)

Size: 103,4 MB
Time: 39:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995/2015
Styles: Blues Rock, Blues Country, Americana
Art: Front

01. That’s Me In The Bar (3:54)
02. Sign On The Line (2:52)
03. She’s Waiting For Me (2:46)
04. Checkin’ In (2:33)
05. Music Box (2:47)
06. Callin' Home (2:09)
07. Night Out On The Town (3:15)
08. Pass Me By (2:37)
09. I Meant What I Said (3:49)
10. Maybe I’m To Blame (2:14)
11. I Confess (3:12)
12. Some People Call It Love (4:13)
13. If You Want Me To Stay (Bonus Track) (3:11)

Includes never before released version of If You Want Me to Stay featuring FLEA. Produced by Jim Keltner

Featuring performances by: Ry Cooder, Jim Keltner, David Hidalgo (Los Lobos), Robben Ford, Bill Payne (Little Feat), Waddy Wachtel, Sweet Pea Atkinson, Sid Page & Flea.

Compass Records is re-releasing A.J. Croce's highly successful album, THAT'S ME IN THE BAR in celebration of its 20th anniversary. With his unique jazz piano stylings and blues-tinged voice, the 12-track album established Croce as a singular artistic force in 1995.
Hailed by The Boston Globe as a thoughtful, probing record, THAT'S ME IN THE BAR boasts appearances from the likes of Billy Payne (Little Feat), Sweet Pea Atkinson (Was (Not Was)), Robben Ford, Ry Cooder, Waddy Wachtel, Sid Page (Sly & The Family Stone), and others.

The re-release will feature a bonus track, If You Want Me to Stay, recorded 20 years ago but locked in the vault until now. Producer Jim Keltner, the leading session drummer in America according to Bob Dylan, held down the percussion and invited a slew of illustrious friends to play on the track as well. Multi-instrumentalist David Hidalgo's (Los Lobos) masterful contributions include horn and accordion lines, while Keltner's next-door-neighbor Flea (Red Hot Chili Peppers) added a heavy dose of funky bass. A.J. Croce, whose timeless voice has cured like good Scotch whisky, rerecorded the vocals in 2015 for the 20th anniversary re-release.

Croce, son of legendary singer-songwriter Jim Croce, began his career at age 17 opening for B.B. King. Unbound by genre, Croce s music spans from jazz to Americana to blues to pop.

That's Me In The Bar