| Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King |  | Artist: Dave Matthews Band Label: Rca
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $9.99 as of 3/22/2010 08:36 CDT details You Save: $8.99 (47%)
New (37) Used (8) from $8.00
Seller: thetangotienda
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.1
MPN: 748712 UPC: 886974871224 EAN: 0886974871224
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| Tracks:
| - | Grux | | - | Shake Me Like A Monkey | | - | Funny The Way It Is | | - | Lying In The Hands of God | | - | Why I Am | | - | Dive In | | - | Spaceman | | - | Squirm | | - | Alligator Pie | | - | Seven | | - | Time Bomb | | - | Baby Blue | | - | You & Me |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description Produced by Rob Cavallo (Green Day, My Chemical Romance), Big Whiskey has been hailed by Rolling Stone as the group’s "heaviest album yet, both musically and emotionally," which went on to note: "Throughout, Carter Beauford beats out elaborate, propulsive groves; bassist Stefan Lessard lays down Flea-style funk bass lines; violinist Boyd Tinsley plays cresting, intense runs; and Matthews mirrors Moore’s saxophone lines with scatlike singing." Billboard, in a cover story on Dave Matthews Band, praised Big Whiskey as "its best album yet… Highlights include the funk-rock rave-up 'Shake Me Like a Monkey,' the stirring ballad 'Lying in the Hands of God,' the swampy rocker 'Alligator Pie (Cockadile),' radio-friendly fare like 'Why I Am,' which features playful horns over a solid rock riff and a hooky chorus, and 'Funny the Way It Is,' which parlays a subtle intro into a soaring, syncopated anthem."
Album Description 2009 release, the first studio album in over four years from American singer/songwriter Dave Matthews and his trusted band. Produced by Rob Cavallo, Big Whiskey & The Groogrux King is the follow-up to 2005's Stand Up, which was the fourth consecutive DMB studio set to enter the Billboard Top 200 at #1. DMB have sold more than 35 million unites (CDs and DVDs combined) and show no signs of slowing down. 12 tracks.
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| Customer Reviews:
DMB March 16, 2010 Rev. Brian Waddell (Texas) For a die hard DMB fan this is a good cd. Not their best but true to their roots.
love it March 12, 2010 Susan (Texas) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Bought this for my husband for Valentine's but the whole family loves it. Very upbeat and fun listening.
DMB returns, in a Big Way March 5, 2010 J. Pratty (Manhattan Beach, CA USA) After the death of LeRoi Moore in 2008, there was left a gaping hole in DMB's line-up that caused many people like myself to wonder if they would be able to come back from such a huge loss both mentally and musically. Big Whiskey answers those fears and then some. After the exceedingly dull American Baby, Whiskey finds the band more focused than any release since Busted Stuff. The band even channels some of the jams that got them started way back on BTCS. "Lying in the Hands of God" might just be my favorite DMB song now. This album is not just a fitting tribute and honor to the late LeRoi, but it might even be arguably DMB's best album.
Jammin' up to the sky February 23, 2010 Anthony Rupert (Milwaukee, WI) I've always been a fan of DMB, but I noticed that their most recent albums haven't been as well-received as their earlier stuff, even though album sales hadn't dropped off. To make things even more difficult, saxophonist LeRoi Moore died during production due to injuries stemming from an ATV accident on his farm. But Dave and the boys soldiered on with their tribute to their fallen brother, Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King.
You can especially tell they're saluting LeRoi by his instrumental interludes at the beginning of the album and after "You & Me". Critics and fans alike are calling this album the best album of the band's career, probably because it's more in the vein of Under the Table and Dreaming and Crash in that it doesn't sound quite as mainstream as their later stuff. Although I agree with that assertion, I can't exactly call the album a classic. But there are great songs aplenty, like "Why I Am"; and if you can't get energized by "Shake Me Like a Monkey", I don't know what's wrong.
Another highlight, "Squirm", is the kind of theatrical track I haven't really heard from them since Before These Crowded Streets (I initially thought there was too much going on in that song, but it grew on me now). But Dave DOES go a little too far with the hard-rock-style screaming during the bridge of "Time Bomb". But that can be ignored after hearing standouts like "Baby Blue", "Alligator Pie" and the aforementioned "You & Me" (people finally picked up on the latter after the Grammy performance, but did no one see Saturday Night Live???).
Though a tragedy was the inspiration for Big Whiskey, it somehow turned the album into a nice return to form for the band. I think LeRoi would have been proud.
Anthony Rupert
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