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Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan | 
| Artist: Various Artists Label: Ace Records Category: Music
List Price: £18.99 Buy New: £14.48 You Save: £4.51 (24%)
New (34) Used (5) from £10.00
Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 1072
Media: Audio CD Discs: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 5 x 0.6
UPC: 029667032230 EAN: 0029667032230 ASIN: B00149ND8C
Release Date: February 25, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Tracks:
Disc 1
| • | Turn Your Radio On - Grandpa Jones | | • | Papa's On The Housetop - Leroy Carr And Scrapper Blackwell | | • | Shortnin' Bread - Paul Chaplain & His Emeralds | | • | Seven Nation Army - The White Stripes | | • | Gun Fever (Blam Blam Fever) - The Valentines | | • | Pistol Packin' Mama - Al Dexter & His Troopers | | • | Pistol Packin' Mama - The Hurricanes | | • | Homework - Otis Rush | | • | He Will Break Your Heart - Jerry Butler | | • | Take It Away Lucky - Eddie Noack | | • | Buddy, Stay Off The Wine - Betty Hall Jones | | • | Tears A Go-Go - Charlie Rich | | • | Rich Woman - Li'l Millet & His Creoles | | • | Laughin' & Jokin' - Ernie Chaffin | | • | Me And My Chauffeur Blues - Memphis Minnie Accompanied By Little Son Joe | | • | If I Lose - The Stanley Brothers | | • | I Sat And Cried - Jimmy Nelson | | • | Beatnik's Wish - Patsy Raye & The Beatniks | | • | Devil In His Heart - The Donays | | • | Let's Invite Them Over - George Jones & Melba Montgomery | | • | Don't Take Ev'rybody To Be Your Friend - Sister Rosetta Tharpe With The Sam Price Trio | | • | Good Morning Heartache - Billie Holiday | | • | Pouring Water On A Drowning Man - James Carr | | • | I Drink - Mary Gauthier | | • | Mother Earth - Memphis Slim |
Disc 2
| • | Chain Of Fools - Aretha Franklin | | • | Walk A Mile In My Shoes - Joe South & The Believers | | • | Cry Tough - Alton Ellis & The Flames | | • | Tommy Gun - The Clash | | • | (Everytime I Hear) That Mellow Saxophone - Roy Montrell | | • | Those Dj Shows - Patrice Holloway | | • | I Ain\x{2019}T Drunk - Lonnie \x{201c}The Cat\x{201d} | | • | Eat That Chicken - Charles Mingus | | • | Mama, Get Your Hammer - Bobby Peterson Quintet | | • | How High The Moon - Slim Gaillard | | • | Cool Water - The Sons Of The Pioneers | | • | Only A Rose - Geraint Watkins | | • | I Walk In My Sleep - Berna - Dean | | • | Stars Fell On Alabama - Jack Teagarden\x{2019}S Chicagoans | | • | Mama Tried (The Ballad From Killers Three) - Merle Haggard & The Strangers | | • | Big Long Slidin\x{2019} Thing - Dinah Washington | | • | Black Coffee - Bobby Darin | | • | I\x{2019}D Rather Drink Muddy Water - The Cats And The Fiddle | | • | Ain\x{2019}T Got The Money To Pay For This Drink - George Zimmerman & The Thrills With The Bubber Cyphers | | • | Bottle And A Bible - The Yayhoos | | • | Okie\x{2019}S In The Pokie - Jimmy Patton | | • | If You\x{2019}Re So Smart, How Come You Ain\x{2019}T Rich? - Louis Jordan | | • | Ay Te Dejo En San Antonio - Santiago Jimenez | | • | Mona - Bo Diddley | | • | Roadrunner (Twice) - The Modern Lovers |
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| Customer Reviews:
A wonderfully eclectic collection. May 23, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Theme Time Radio Hour is one of the most original and enlightening music programmes on the air. It's brilliantly presented by Bob Dylan who plays an eclectic mix of often obscure records all linked by a theme. Dylan's knowledge of American popular music is immense and each programme is peppered with his unique combination of wit and wisdom. So, Ace Records are to be congratulated for issuing this double album containing 50 wonderful tracks of the kind of music to be heard on TTRH. The only thing missing is the man himself but that shouldn't deter anyone from acquiring this marvellous and wide-ranging selection of great music expertly compiled by Ace.
Is this the same man ? March 27, 2008 1 out of 13 found this review helpful
The guy who in the 60s used to wind up the Press and tell anyone who asked that some song was about light bulbs or something seems to have suddenly acquired vast knowledge over the last 10 years at least. Maybe he goes on Wikipedia a lot as some of the info he imparts is not exactly rooted in most peoples' brains. Dylan though showed signs of what was to come in an album which was eternally slagged off-SELF PORTRAIT. Remember that one-where he showed he was not averse to covering other peoples stuff.It suited me fine as I love cover versions. Anyway Bob next time you do one of these can you include plenty of high school pop-you know Bobby Vee who once sacked you-and a few of the other Bobbies like the great Bobby Rydell.And not forgetting Fabian-time he had some credibilty. Oh and Barry McGuire who sang the greatest anti War song of all-Eve of Destruction
WORTHY OF 6 STARS March 24, 2008 13 out of 14 found this review helpful
Quite frankly, this is the best reissue of 2008, already. It shows that not only has Dylan been the cultural commentator of the world, but that he is also the cultural curator of some amazing music. It is almost as if this is the music that has even shaped his own recordings. It is not that far from Louis Jordan to "Open The Door, Homer" on the Basement Tapes, or the early blues on this album in relation to Love & Theft. But, isn't all pop/rock music Love & Theft ?
GOLDMINE March 21, 2008 19 out of 21 found this review helpful
Ace Records could hardly go wrong with this aesthetically. Whether it sells or not is anyone's guess. OK, we'll all have our individual misgivings about some of the 50 songs chosen here, but they're just quibbles. The cumulative effect of hearing so many great original voices and players is mindboggling. The sound fidelity is so much better than the Theme Time Radio Show MPEGs that most of us have been listening to. Rhythms, styles and subject matter are as diverse as anyone could wish for. For all the diversity, however, all the tracks share a common humanity and integrity, which seems to be the main point of Bob's radio show in the first place.
I can't imagine anyone being disappointed at shelling out money for this. One thing I've liked about TTRH is its balance: male/female, black/white, 1930s/40s, 20s/60s and so on. We've all been taken aback by Dylan's knowledge, and obvious love, of Caribbean and Hispanic music, the latter of which, I would like to see better represented on the collection. But this is overwhelmingly a celebration of American vernacular music. It's also an affirmation that, for all its inventions, its movies, its self-marketing, vernacular music has always been America's best expression of itself.
PW
Magnificent March 13, 2008 42 out of 46 found this review helpful
If I was Prime Minister or President I would make Ace Records the national musical curator, and let them pick and choose any recording that they wanted for any project they wanted. They get it right time and time again, and this set is no exception, in fact this release even ups their game. You get two CDs containing 50 tracks and a beautiful 48 page accompanying booklet with a commentary for each track and illustrations galore. All housed in a neat card cover.
But, hang on, let's start at the beginning. Bob Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour (or TTRH for short), the radio show, is everything you would expect of that eclectic, eccentric and electric troubadour. If you don't know it, though surely you do, each programme is an hour long and revolves around a specific theme (radio, jail, Christmas, luck, drink or whatever) with DJ Bob introducing each song in his sandpaper whisper, giving a brief and incisive commentary on the track or perhaps a pertinent quote or maybe a whimsical digression. The music played is hugely diverse, stretching back to the beginning of the 20th Century right up to last week. It covers all bases: country, blues, R&B, jazz, reggae, soul, rockabilly, punk, swing, any tributary that feeds into the great flowing meandering river of popular music. Each show is a delight and makes for fascinating listening whether you're a Dylan fan or not (though perhaps slightly more fascinating if you fall into the former category).
Show by show, then, the listener is being treated to nothing less than an alternative history of popular music. The themed approach prevents it from being a po-faced academic and ploddingly chronological exercise, rooting it instead in the realities of lived human experience, whether noble or mean, gleeful or grim. (Tony Blackburn used to do a similar theme based thing in his `Golden Hour' back in his Radio 1 days but of course with barely a hint of the wit and grace with which Bob acquits his role.) Bob Dylan is using his drawing power to expand our horizons by bringing to our attention songs and recordings that we should know about if we take music seriously (and serious doesn't mean joyless). If you think you know music but you've never listened to a song recorded before 2005, or 1990, or 1979, or 1967, or 1955 then TTRH demonstrates that being so blinkered isn't good for your soul.
This wonderful double CD then is a selection of highlights from the first series of TTRH. There is no involvement from Bob Dylan directly, though the producer of his show is a co-producer/compiler here, but really that's not the name of the game. Even if there isn't one linking theme, the track selection is wayward and intoxicating as you would expect, mixing the old, the new, the familiar, the unfamiliar into a big ole cauldron (or maybe a copper kettle) packed with flavours and spices that shouldn't mix together but act and react to one another to produce a mighty potent brew. The time span covered is as expansive as a typical show too. The second track here dates from 1930 and that's followed by Shortnin' Bread from 1960 and then the mighty Seven Nation Army by The White Stripes from 2002. That's eight decades straddled in the course of three songs. And they fit together just Jim Dandy.
This is real music for real people, as it is meant to be, with all facets of life addressed with wit and grit and sauce and elegance (in other words you'll find no hollow empty processed Westlife/Blue/Pop Idol/X Factor style bleating here). If you don't find the prospect of this set appealing then I guess you're in the wrong section on Amazon - home and garden is over there. To everyone else I say, don't think twice, it's alright to buy it.
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