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| Title: Malone Alone |
MP3, WMA, MPC, OGG, M4A, FLAC |
| Artist: Bob Malone |
| (c): (C) 2003 Delta Moon Records |
| (p): (P) 2003 Meloontunes |
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10.80 $ |
2003-02-17 |
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| Sometimes I Wish I Were Me |
Bob Malone |
06:01 |
0.00 $ |
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Top 20: Roots Music Report & Living Blues Radio Charts. Billy Joel meets Leon Russell with Dr. John and Tom Waits stopping by for drinks - and Mose Allison & David Frishberg drinking them all under the table. If you can remember it - you weren't there.
"Malone connects with audiences via his self-depreciatingly witty banter and songs...sung with an affable misanthropy that recalls Randy Newman and Tom Waits. He's also a dazzlingly skilled pianist." City Link
"Malone Alone is a pure joy to listen to. A surefire chart climber!" Roots Music Report
"Dixie-fried vocalist, songwriter and piano pulverizer supreme, Bob Malone, returns with his first live album, Malone Alone. Fiery performances and on-mic asides reveal the masterful storyteller and musician at his most entertaining. " Music Connection Magazine _____________________________ Bob Malone makes music for grownups. A timeless sound that is pure Americana: an intoxicating distillation of uptown blues, gutbucket New Orleans ragtime stomp, and classic singer/songwriter pop songcraft, delivered with a wry lyrical eye for detail, and the ferocious energy of a great rock and roll piano man. An extraordinarily charismatic performer and virtuoso musician, he has been best described in review as "a raconteur of the human condition." Bob Malone's songs span the musical spectrum from full tilt boogie to the seamless melodies of great ballads that linger like classic standards, all sung with his one-of-a-kind whiskey-cured voice.
A genuine indie success story, Bob Malone is highlighted along with Bruce Springsteen, Paul Simon, Keith Richards, and Harry Connick Jr. among others with a featured essay in the 2002 HarperCollins book Working Musicians. |
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