High Land, Hard Rain

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Roddy Frame was slightly ahead of his time. In 1983, when he wrote, arranged, and--with the help of his band, Aztec Camera--recorded High Land, Hard Rain, he was just 19 years old; and Britpop, the genre Aztec Camera in part inspired, wouldn't become popular for another decade. There is certainly more to High Land, Hard Rain than Britpop, however. Frame, a stellar acoustic guitar strummer, fills the 13 songs with jazz chords, and Aztec Camera's grooves foreshadow British jazz popsters the Style Council and Everything But the Girl. Whether making you dance ("Oblivious," "Queen's Tattoos") or reflect ("The Bugle Sounds Again," "We Could Send Letters"), Frame proves a master craftsman. A bonus tip: the sing-songy "Walk Out to Winter" is a fine addition to any holiday mix. --Bill Crandall

Music Review:

  1. Horrorscope [Enhanced] [Explicit Lyrics]
  2. How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb (Deluxe) [Enhanced] [Limited Edition]
  3. i
  4. Indestructible
  5. Isle of View [Live]
  6. It'll End in Tears (Reis)
  7. Kick
  8. Land of the Free?
  9. Life's Too Good
  10. Live in Hyde Park [Import]

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Goodbye Yellow Brick Road [Import]

Terrorist Attack Through the Eyes of a Child

Symphonie Fantastique / Le Corsaire

Music: Questions [Import]

VIP Lounge Presented by Voltaxx [Import]

The Singles Collection 1984-1990

Unter Dem Himmel Von Paris

True Story [Explicit Lyrics]

The Greatest Holiday Classics

The Transcendental Piano

Unforgettable Sax

This Is New

Valoom Padoom Pink (Or Something)

Stravinsky: SYMPHONIES

Genuine Chestnut