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| March 16-20, 1992 |
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| Artist: Uncle Tupelo - (Audio CD) - 2003 |
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Lowest Price: $7.99 at Amazon |
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Average Overall Rating:
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13 Ratings ,13 Reviews |
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Average Overall Rating: 13 Ratings,13 Reviews |
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| a great cd. |
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2006-10-21 00:00:00 0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful |
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country/rock/folk, whatever. this is such a fantastic recording. not a dud song in the lot. great singing, great songs. i call this an american classic. (Read full review at Amazon)
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| A classic album |
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2006-05-11 00:00:00 0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful |
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No doubt this is the coming together of two brilliant musicians at a moment in time which has produced the most brilliant album which has clearly started a movement. Every song is brilliant. Sensational buy this before any other alt country... (Read full review at Amazon)
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| American and Essential |
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2006-01-05 00:00:00 0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful |
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This is a fine roots album if ever there was one. Before Wilco, before Son Volt, there was Uncle Tupelo. And of all the Uncle Tupelo discs, this, in my mind, stands supreme. The songs alternate vocals between Jeff Tweedy and Jar Farrar.... (Read full review at Amazon)
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| Do not miss this one |
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2005-08-10 00:00:00 0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful |
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If you are looking for one of the best Alt Country / Americana (whatever those are) CDs ever created this is it. Look no further. These guys were the masters of it. With so much crap on the radio, its nice to look back in time and find some... (Read full review at Amazon)
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| definitely my favorite uncle tupelo album |
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2005-04-15 00:00:00 0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful |
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The other three Uncle Tupelo albums each have some good songs, but don't really hold together that well as records. "March" does, beautifully. Recording at a crossroads in music history when underground bands were getting mainstream radio... (Read full review at Amazon)
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| March 16-20, 1992 |
| $7.99 - $10.18 |
| from 3 stores |
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| March 16-20, 1992 Full Description |
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After ripping it up on No Depression and Still Feel Gone, their first two albums of twangy punk rock, Uncle Tupelo unplugged for this remarkable tribute--half originals, half political and religious covers--to the band's old-time influences. While the new songs of frontmen Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy are consistently strong here (especially Farrar's "Grindstone"), the album's haunted covers of old folk songs are the true keepers. Tweedy's apocalyptic version of "Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down" and Farrar's earnest readings of the beat-down "Moonshiner" and the labor song "Coalminers" are as frightening, beautiful, and passionate as anything the band ever recorded. The 2003 expanded and remastered edition adds three unreleased demos, a live version of "Moonshiner," and an instrumental B-side. --David Cantwell |
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