Madison, WI    
Madison, WI Web Site Design by Webstix, Inc.
Home News Movies Shopping Hotels Autos Jobs About Advertise



Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Music/CD » Alt-Country & Americana » Too Hot for Snakes  
Categories
Apparel
Beauty
Baby
Books
Computer
DVD
Electronics
Gourmet Food
Grocery
Health
Home and Garden
Jewelry
Kitchen
Magazines
Music/CD
Musical Instruments
Office
Outdoors
Pet Supplies
Cameras
Science
Software
Sporting Goods
Tools
Video Games
Video Downloads
Related Categories
• Alt-Country & Americana
Country
Styles
Music
• General
Pop
Styles
Music
• General
Rock
Styles
Music
• General
Live Albums
Rock
Styles
Music
• Country Rock
Live Albums
Rock
Styles
Music
• Country Rock
Rock
Styles
Music
• Roots Rock
Rock
Styles
Music
• CD Album
CD
Format (binding)
Refinements
Music
• Live
Edition (format)
Refinements
Music
• Main Album
Edition (format)
Refinements
Music
Can I Come Look At These Items?
This online store is in association with Amazon.com, so these great, high-qualiy products will come from their warehouse or from other partners. Thanks for shopping!

Too Hot for Snakes

Too Hot for Snakes

zoom enlarge 
Artist: Carla Olson & Mick Taylor
Label: Collector's Choice
Category: Music

List Price: $19.98
Buy New: $13.34
You Save: $6.64 (33%)



New (36) Used (7) from $13.34

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 17341

Format: Live
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 925
UPC: 617742092523
EAN: 0617742092523
ASIN: B0016MJ3FO

Release Date: June 10, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!

Tracks:

  • Who Put the Sting on the Honeybee
  • Slow Rollin' Train
  • Trying to Hold On
  • Rubies & Diamonds
  • See the Light
  • You Can t Move In
  • Broken Hands
  • Hartley Quits
  • Midnight Mission
  • Silver Train
  • Loserville
  • Ring of Truth
  • Friends in Baltimore
  • Great Black Hole
  • Kinderwars
  • Reap the Whirlwind
  • Justice
  • Fortune
  • Within an Ace
  • World of Pain
  • Is the Lady Gone
  • Think I'm Going Mad
  • Winter
  • You Gotta Move
  • Sway

Similar Items:

  • Live at Royal Albert Hall 1971
  • Detroit '85-Live & Unreleased
  • Shine a Light: Original Soundtrack
  • From the Reach
  • Nine Lives

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Pair all-time great blues-rock guitarist Mick Taylor with roots-rock chanteuse Carla Olson, throw in band members like Ian McLagan, Barry Goldberg and harmonica whiz John Luke Logan, and you had one hot combo, too hot, dare we say, for snakes! This deluxe reissue expands their 1990 live at the Roxy album with a number of tracks from Carla's various studio albums, all of 'em featuring Mick and all of 'em long out-of-print. We even unearthed an unreleased cut, an alternate version of 'Winter' that's over twice as long as the Rolling Stones' version on 'Goat s Head Soup' with much Mick guitar solo magic, and the rare, Japan-only track 'You Gotta Move' to up the temperature. And Stones fans wait 'til you hear the 7- minute version of 'Sway' (the original on Sticky Fingers faded out at 3:50 just when Mick was taking off)!

Album Description
Pair ex-Rolling Stone's guitarist Mick Taylor with roots-rock chanteuse Carla Olson, throw in band members like Ian McLagan (The Faces/Small Faces), Barry Goldberg & harmonica whiz John Luke Logan, & you had one hot combo. This deluxe reissue expands their 1990 Live at the Roxy album with a number of tracks from Carla's various studio albums, all of 'em featuring Mick, an unreleased cut: an alternate version of Winter that's over twice as long as the version on Goat's Head Soup and the rare, Japan-only track You Gotta Move.


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars L.A. roots rocker meets British blues-rock legend   September 1, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

L.A. roots-rocker Olson and British blues-rock guitarist Taylor made a powerful pair. This live album, recorded at the Roxy in Los Angeles in 1990, was their debut, waxed with a hand-picked band that had rehearsed for a week and played only one warm-up gig. It's a sign of the players' quality that the group sounds like a well-oiled road unit, with Olson's powerful, earthy vocals backed by a solid rhythm section of Rick Hemmert on drums and Jesse Sublett on bass, and sparked throughout by Taylor's brilliant electric guitar. Released in 1991 under this title in the U.S. and as "Live" in Europe, this two-CD reissue adds a Taylor-sung cover of Fred McDowell's "You Gotta Move," previously released in Japan, and an entire second disc of studio tracks picked from Olson's subsequent collaborations with Taylor.

Unlike Olson's earlier live outing with her band the Textones (coincidentally released by Collectors' Choice as "Detroit '85 Live & Unreleased"), the blues-rock essayed here hasn't aged a day. Augmenting Olson and Taylor's originals with contemporary blues from band members Jesse Sublett ("Who Put the Sting on the Honeybee") and George Callins ("Trying to Hold On"), they also revisit a pair of Jagger-Richards tunes ("Sway" and "Silver Train") from Taylor's tenure with the Rolling Stones. Olson smartly stays away from a luminous Jagger-like star-turn on these latter tunes, sinking instead into the lyrics and the band, and giving Taylor room for his emotional, tour de force playing, especially on "Sway."

Taylor's repeatedly shown himself to be one of the ultimate journeymen guitarists. His stints with John Mayall and the Rolling Stones, collaborations with Jack Bruce, Gong, and John Phillips, and guest appearances with Mike Oldfield, Little Feat, Bob Dylan and others have all been both reliable and memorable. More telling, his work as a gunslinger has greatly overshadowed his solo output. His collaborations with Olson are no exception, showing how fluidly he could integrate his playing with others, and how well his original compositions could be picked. He stepped to the microphone for "Broken Hands," taken from his self-titled 1979 solo release, and reached back to 1968 for his Mayall-recorded instrumental "Hartley Quits."

The collected studio sides again feature Olson and her bandmate's songs together with a pair of Jagger-Richards compositions, "Winter" (from Taylor's tenure with the Stones) and "Think I'm Goin' Mad." Though the productions are more polished and the arrangements more rehearsed, the playing couldn't get much tighter or empathetic than the live unit had shown. There's more variety here, born of recordings spanning ten years and different lineups, with good-sized helpings of Olson's rockin' roots (crossing Chrissie Hynde's emotion with Carlene Carter's country inflections) and Taylor's mesmerizing guitar playing. The opening take of "Winter," for example, doubles the length of the Stones' original, with Taylor laying down a superb five-minute solo alongside the lyrical piano of Barry Goldberg.

The bulk of the studio tracks find Taylor integrating himself into the band, offering up tasty annotations or short solos. The Olson original "Great Black Hole" provides Taylor a chance to display his chops with a slide. Overall, Olson's work with Taylor is sharper and bluesier than her earlier work with the Textones; there's still a healthy dose of the songwriter's social consciousness, but fleshed out with Taylor's guitar playing and mostly stripped of the mid-80s sounds that dated previous albums. Olson's fans likely know most of this work, and though Taylor's fans may know the live album, they'll relish the sampler of performances from Olson's studio albums. [2008 redtunictroll at hotmail dot com]



4 out of 5 stars Awesome duo!   August 7, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

What a fine album with rich vocals and, the inset of some classic Stones material was worth the wait! Mike Taylors guitar playing is as fresh as ever along with Carla's vocal makes for one enjoyable listen! I hope to hear more collaborated material from these two fine artists!!


5 out of 5 stars Swaying to the Blues   July 22, 2008
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

If the only cut of significance was "Sway," the 2-CD set would be essential for anyone who wants to hear the true art of playing the electric guitar; Mick Taylor takes no prisoners in this sizzling rendition from his classic work with the Rolling Stones.

But the remaining 24 cuts solidly show Taylor's underrated collaboration with Carla Olson, on stage and in the studio. The special gem is the reissue of a live album that was recorded in March 1990 from the Roxy Theatre, which was originally released under several different titles.

The second disc is studio recordings from a number of mostly out-of-print/rare albums. This is a sweeping exploration that covers nearly 20 years of material and the duo's special passion for the blues.


 

  © 2001-2007 MadisonClick, Inc. 2820 Walton Commons W. - Suite 108 - Madison, WI 53718 Madison WI Web Directory  
Home | Madison, WI Hotels | Madison, WI Used Cars | Madison, WI Weather | Link To Us | Help | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | What's New? | Shopping