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Time, Tequila & Therapy

Old Dominion

Country - Released October 8, 2021 | Arista Nashville

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On A Day Like Today

Bryan Adams

Pop - Released January 1, 1998 | A&M

#Covers

Sara Farell

Pop - Released March 31, 2018 | QLR Recordings

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I Don't Wanna Live Forever (Fifty Shades Darker) [Reprise De Zayn & Taylor Swift]

Arno Krinzer

Electronic - Released January 15, 2017 | Fabwall Production

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I Don't Wanna Live Forever (feat. Jovon Newman & Wyatt Hall) [Live]

A.1.C

Pop - Released November 22, 2021 | WH MUSIC

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Live From the Ryman And More

Sheryl Crow

Pop - Released August 13, 2021 | The Valory Music Co.

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Big City

Merle Haggard

Country - Released June 11, 1981 | Epic - Nashville

Hi-Res Distinctions The Qobuz Ideal Discography
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Tales: Live in Copenhagen 1964

Bill Evans

Jazz - Released December 1, 2023 | Elemental Music Records SL

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The Essential Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan

Rock - Released October 31, 2000 | Columbia

A double-disc set released for the holiday season of 2000, The Essential Bob Dylan is a fine choice for the casual listener that just wants all the songs they know on one collection -- it's Dylan's equivalent of Beatles One. Outside of the remastering and the previously non-LP (and very good) "Things Have Changed," there's nothing here for collectors, but, then again, that's not who this was designed for. This collection is for the listener that wants "Blowin' in the Wind," "Like a Rolling Stone," "All Along the Watchtower," "Quinn the Eskimo," "Lay Lady Lay," and "Tangled Up in Blue" in one tidy place. Yes, it's easy to find great songs missing, but for those casual fans, and for those looking for a fairly comprehensive yet concise entry point, The Essential Bob Dylan comes close to living up to its title.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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Live at the Royal Albert Hall

Arctic Monkeys

Alternative & Indie - Released December 4, 2020 | Domino Recording Co

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The atmosphere of a live gig is never as fresh as when you sweat in the pit. But in these times of lockdown, it is through live albums that we have to let off steam, and relive the vibrant ambiance of gigs past. And so it is good news that Alex Turner's gang have chosen this moment to release one. In 2018, the Arctic Monkeys begin a long tour to promote the spring release of Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino, a fabulous swerve towards French kinetic sensuality, and away from rock anthems hammered by Matt Helders' drums. This live performance was filmed at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and the profits were donated to War Child UK, as are the proceeds from the release of the album. The concert looks back over the band's entire discography: the classics from their period of greatest success – the first three albums – but also darker sounds with Humbug, pop with Suck It and See and their return to grace, with AM. But Alex Turner is never as good a crooner as he is when it comes to new material. If RU Mine?, which closes these twenty tracks, is worth its weight in gold, Star Treatment and One Point Perspective remain Arctic diamonds in the rough, and have yet to lose their sheen. Salutary. © Charlotte Saintoin/Qobuz
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Okie

Vince Gill

Country - Released August 23, 2019 | MCA Nashville

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Reclaiming a derogatory Dust Bowl-era term, Okie is loosely a concept album about human struggle in the Sooner State. But dealing with issues of divisiveness, faith and heartache, it's also pure Americana. Taking a break from the bluegrass that has largely defined his later career, Gill turns to his gentle country singer-songwriter roots: Opener I Don't Wanna Ride the Rails No More has echoes of his days in Pure Prairie League. As a lyricist, he pulls no punches, looking at how pro-choice is still not an easy choice on the sweet-toned What Choice Will You Make and embracing his Christianity on the gently shuffling The Red Words and When My Amy Prays, which finds Gill hitting the spine-shivering high notes. Forever Changed is a frank warning to abusers, while the hymn-like The Price of Regret is a plea for kindness. Gill also pays tribute to his heroes on Nothin' Like a Guy Clark Song and A World Without Haggard, offering up what he learned from each. The music is mellow, but the messages are deep. © Qobuz
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Nils Lofgren Band Live

Nils Lofgren

Rock - Released January 1, 1975 | VISION MUSIC

Although he'll be forever best known as Bruce Springsteen's go-to guitar player post-Steven Van Zandt, Nils Lofgren is an accomplished solo artist in his own right, having issued numerous critically acclaimed (yet often commercially overlooked) solo albums. He's also issued countless live albums over the years, and 2003 saw the latest entry, Live. As with most double-disc live sets from veteran rockers, various entries from Lofgren's career are touched upon -- including a wink to his early band, Grin (which is represented by "White Lies" and "Lost a Number"), plus a classic track from his brief affiliation with Crazy Horse (the Danny Whitten-penned "I Don't Wanna Talk About It"). Also included are newer solo tracks, such as the hop-a-long album opener, "Puttin' Out Fires," as well as a rendition of "The Star Spangled Banner" -- which is not the expected instrumental Hendrix-esque guitar showcase (but rather focuses on Lofgren singing the lyrics). As fans have known for decades, Lofgren is one heck of a multi-talented gentleman, and Live offers further evidence.© Greg Prato /TiVo
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Dark Black

Kristina Train

Pop - Released November 13, 2012 | EMI

The sophomore effort from Georgia-raised, Britain-based vocalist Kristina Train, 2012's Dark Black is a brooding, atmospheric collection of slow-burn pop songs that put her burnished, sultry croon at the fore. Picking up where 2009's Spilt Milk left off, Dark Black finds Train once again working with British singer/songwriter Ed Harcourt, as well as songwriter/producer Martin Craft. Together, they've come up with an album that builds upon Train's twangy Southern roots layered with a baroque, cinematic aesthetic. Train's vocals are often drenched in an echo-chamber sound, often backed with boomy, resonant percussion, languid piano parts, eerie orchestral sections, shimmering baritone guitar lines, and even some light electronic flourishes. In that sense, the album brings to mind the work of such similarly minded contemporaries as singer/guitarist Richard Hawley and neo-soft rock singer Rumer as much as it does the classic soul-inflected '60s sound of Dusty Springfield. While the songs here are deeply romantic and memorable, they take their time to unfold before giving up any big, melodic hooks -- which they certainly have. Mood setting is clearly a large part of Train's dramatic style, and cuts like the yearning, Roy Orbison-sounding "Dream of Me" and the Jacques Brel-esque ballad "Saturdays Are the Greatest" envelope you with a kind of late-afternoon melancholy, long before they level you with their heartbreaking lyrical poignancy. Ultimately, on Dark Black, Train is a master at keeping us on the edge of our seats, and by the time she presents a song's big pop reveal, as she does on the title track's darkly ironic reappropriation of Procol Harum's "Whiter Shade of Pale," she already has us hooked.© Matt Collar /TiVo
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Wildflower

Sheryl Crow

Pop - Released January 1, 2005 | A&M

Originally, Sheryl Crow planned to have her follow-up to 2002's Top Ten hit C'mon, C'mon be two simultaneously released albums, announcing their autumn release at the beginning of 2005, but by the time the fall rolled around, the project had been scaled back to a single album: Wildflower. If C'mon, C'mon was a cheerful, bright record ideal for sunny summer days, Wildflower is its opposite, a warm, introspective record that's tailored for the fall. It's not dissimilar to 1998's The Globe Sessions, which felt like a somber hangover to the wonderfully weird party of her eponymous 1996 second album, but where The Globe Sessions had a weary, heartbroken feel, there's a comfortable, lived-in atmosphere and sense of genuine affection on Wildflower. Celebrity press and pre-release hype attributed this love-mad vibe to Crow's romance with cyclist Lance Armstrong -- the couple announced its engagement the same month Wildflower was released -- and there surely must be some sort of correlation between Crow's personal life and work, but anybody looking for an album explicitly about her relationship with Lance (the way that, say, Eric Benet's Hurricane is all about his divorce from Halle Berry) will be disappointed. There are certainly plenty of songs about love here, but Crow's songs are not about specific events (unless they're neo-protest songs like the lively "Live It Up"). They're open-ended, so it's easy to hear the record and never think about Armstrong. As a matter of fact, the subjects of the songs matter less than the feel of the album. It's easy to spin Wildflower a couple of times before the songs start to sink in -- unlike her other records, there's nothing here that immediately grabs your attention, they're all growers -- but the mood of the record is immediately appealing. That sustained warm, burnished, relaxed feel -- at once rootsy and upscale, modest and classy -- is reason enough to return to Wildflower to give the songs a chance to take root, and once they do, the album seems to be one of her most consistent records and one of her best.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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Lightnin' in a Bottle: The Official Live Album

The Georgia Satellites

Rock - Released November 19, 2021 | Rhino - Elektra

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Joe Jackson Live 1980 - 1986

Joe Jackson

Rock - Released January 1, 1988 | A&M

A double-disc live collection, Live...1980-1986 manages to effectively trace the development of Joe Jackson's diverse career. Drawing from four different periods in the songwriter's career -- with each period featuring a new backing band -- Live captures Jackson with his original new wave trio, a 1983 quintet that was dominated by keyboards, a horn-driven group from 1984, and a 1986 quartet that specialized in straight-ahead rock & roll. The resulting album highlights his musical diversity, not his songwriting, which means the record is more intriguing as a historical document than as casual listening© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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The Skiffle Sessions: Live In Belfast

Van Morrison

Rock - Released January 17, 2000 | Legacy Recordings

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Chicago 19

Chicago

Rock - Released June 1, 1988 | Rhino - Warner Records

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New Year's Party Through the Decades (60's, 70's, 80's, 90's and 2000's)

#1 Hits Now

Pop - Released October 29, 2021 | Aurels Productions