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Songs From the West Coast

Songs From the West Coast
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  • List Price: $13.98
  • Buy New: $3.00
  • as of 5/26/2012 10:13 EDT details
  • You Save: $10.98 (79%)
In Stock
  • Seller:autumnd81
  • Sales Rank:84,848
  • Languages:German (Unknown), English (Original Language)
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
  • Dimensions (in):6 x 4 x 8
  • Release Date:October 2, 2001
  • MPN:Records
  • UPC:731458633020
  • EAN:0731458633020
  • ASIN:B00005NZDW
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks
  • The Emperor's New Clothes
  • Dark Diamond
  • Look Ma No Hands
  • American Triangle
  • Original Sin
  • Birds
  • I Want Love
  • The Wasteland
  • Ballad Of The Boy In The Red Shoes
  • Love Her Like Me
  • Mansfield
  • This Train Don't Stop There Anymore


Editorial Reviews:
Album Description
Songs From The West Coast - Special Limited Edition. Features bonus CD with 8 tracks, 'Your Song' (With Alessandro Safina), 'Teardrops' (with Lulu), 'The North Star', 'Original Sin' (Junior's Earth Mix Edit), 'Your Song' (Almighty Mix Edit), & the videos 'I Want Love', 'This Train Don't Stop There Anymore' & 'Your Song'. 2002.
Amazon.com's Best of 2001
The appearance of "Rocket Man"-era cohorts Nigel Olsson and Davey Johnstone as backing vocalists touches this CD with one of the trademark sounds of Elton John's 1969-75 LPs. John has acknowledged those records--his most typically singer-songwriterish--occasionally, if mostly to revisit audience favorites in concert (1987's Live in Australia, a late-'90s VH1 show). But on Songs from the West Coast, his admiration of Ryan Adams and Rufus Wainwright (a guest here) inspires him to recall the stripped-down, lyric-driven sensibility of his early days. The tone of the words Bernie Taupin feeds this notorious diva is elegiac, rooted in a wearier version of the romanticism that fueled oldies as diverse as "Your Song," "Love Lies Bleeding," and "Burn Down the Mission." West Coast sidesteps bombast with a couple of exceptions; only "The Wasteland," with its invocation of Robert Johnson, is enough to provoke a dismayed "oy." The standout track is "I Want Love," a Lennonesque rumination that's their most impressive writing, separately or together, in more than a decade. --Rickey Wright

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