Keb Mo and Robert Cray in concert in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada on August 30, 2007 at the Centennial Concert Hall.Robert Cray and Keb Mo Singing "Bring It on Home To Me"Keb Mo singing Shave Yo' Legs w/ Robert CrayNotes from YouTube - GREAT song by Robert Cray and Keb Mo "Bring It on Home to Me", concert in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada on August 30, 2007 at the Centennial Concert Hall.The CD they hav
Három nagyszerű zenész, Albert Collins, Robert Cray és Johnny Copeland közös lemeze.A készítők: Albert Collins (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Robert Cray (vocals, guitar); Johnny Copeland (vocals, guitar); Allen Batts (organ); Johnny B. Gayden (bass) és Casey Jones (drums).A számok:1. T-Bone Shuffle2. Moon Is Full, The3. Lion's Den4. She's Into Something5. Bring Your Fine Self Home6. Blac
I don't believe that I have ever posted anything about Robert Cray. Which is a shame, becaue I really like him a lot. He is on my list of favorite living gutar players.Buy at AllPosters.com Amazon.com WidgetsThe Robert Cray Band Official WebsiteRobert Cray's MySpace page.
Az év elején megjelent album Robert Cray amerikai blues gitáros-énekes felvételeiből ad amolyan best of válogatást.Smoking GunA számok:1. Phone Booth - 3:312. Bad Influence - 2:543. Playin' in the Dirt - 3:464. Smoking Gun - 4:075. I Guess I Showed Her - 3:396. Right Next Door (Because of Me) - 4:207. Don't Be Afraid of the Dark - 3:478. Forecast (Calls for Pain) - 3:599. Consequences - 4:2710. I Was Warned - 7:1611. I Shiver - 5:0712. Moan - 6:0013. Trick or Treat - 3:1114. Love Gone to Waste - 4:1515. Survivor - 5:1516. Poor Johnny - 4:59Tömörítés/Bitrate: 188-218 kb/sLetöltés/Doenload: [ Gigasize Part1 Part2 ] [ Massmirror Part1 Part2 ]Jelszó/Password: levente
Robert Cray - Take Your Shoes Off(1999)320kbpsIt's evident right from the start that Robert Cray's aiming for a Memphis soul groove on Take Your Shoes Off. Willie Mitchell of Hi Records fame co-wrote and did the horn arrangements for the lead-off cut, "Love Gone to Waste," and Jim Pugh's burbling organ would have fit snugly into the mix of an early '70s Al Green record. The blues is not missing from this effort, but is most present in Cray's usual assertive blues guitar lines. Otherwise, this is far more appropriately pegged as a blues-soul album, or even just a retro-soul album, than a straight blues one. Cray, indeed, only writes about half of the songs, covering soul classics identified with Mack Rice's "24-7 Man" and Solomon Burke's "Won't You Give Him (One More Chance)," as well as Willie Dixon's "Tollin' Bells." No one would be claiming that this disc plows new territory, but to Cray's credit, he fits the quasi-Hi and (less frequently) Stax-type grooves with an unforce