Alison Krauss & Union Station

Alison Krauss & Union Station is : Alison Krauss Lead vocals, fiddle. Barry Bales- Bass, Ron Block Guitar, - Banjo. Jerry Douglas, Dobro. Dan Tyminski Guitar, Mandolin, Drums.
Alison Krauss & Union Station live album (album audio CD : 2 disc)
Alison Krauss & Union Station Disc 1 :
1. Let Me Touch You For Awhile 2. Choctaw Hayride 3. The Lucky One 4. Baby, Now That I've Found You 5. Bright Sunny South 6. Every Time You Say Goodbye 7. Tiny Broken Heart 8. Cluck Old Hen 9. Stay 10. Broadway 11. Ghost in This House 12. Forget About It 13. Faraway Land
Alison Krauss & Union Station Disc: 2
1. A Tribute to Peador O'Donnell/Monkey Let the Hogs Out 2. The Boy Who Wouldn't Hoe Corn 3. Take Me For Longing 4. I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow 5. Maybe 6. We Hide & Seek 7. But You Know I Love You 8. When You Say Nothing At All 9. New Favorite 10. Oh, Atlanta 11. Down to the River to Pray 12. There Is A Reason.
Alison Krauss & Union Station live : with two-CD and 25-song set, recorded in Louisville on two nights in the spring of 2002, finds bluegrass's most celebrated crossover band at the top of its game. Krauss's warm, feathery vocals, capable of conveying complex emotions in a single note, appear more full-bodied than in studio recordings, yet lose none of their sensual appeal or dramatic tension. She's perfect, for example, as the melancholy temptress on "Let Me Touch You for Awhile," coming across as both savior and seductress, while Jerry Douglas's Dobro echoes the searing strains of passion and pain.
With banjoist-guitarist Ron Block, bassist Barry Bales, and guest drummer Larry Atamanuik anchoring the rhythm, the ensemble deftly blends bluegrass with jazz, rock, and folk, combining lightning speed (though rushing through "Forget About It") with sophisticated chops, tangible emotion, and thrilling vocal blends. The crowd, more spellbound with every note, doesn't even breathe on "Ghost in This House" and nearly tears the place down on Dan Tyminski's voice-of-George Clooney showcase, "I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow." But who could blame them? It's only one highlight on an album of uncommon artistry, a moving testament to how good live music can be in the hands of world-class players.
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