Sign up to receive special offers and exclusives
Search
Home & GardenBooksCell Phones & Service
Books
Home

Books

 
 
Great Days: The John Prine Anthology
View larger imageEmail a friend

 
 
 

Great Days: The John Prine Anthology  (Audio CD) 
by John Prine

In Stock
Availability: Usually ships in 1 business days
List Price: $31.98
Our Price: $28.99 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
You Save: $2.99 ( 9%)

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Product Promotions:
  • Get $1 worth of MP3 downloads from Amazon MP3 after you order your item.  Here's how (restrictions apply)
Description:

If you buy Great Days: The John Prine Anthology, you may live to regret it. He's probably the best American folk-song lyricist of his generation, mixing low-key poignancy and deadpan humor in perfect proportions. His musical limitations serve to reinforce the understated nature of his art, and his short, plain-spoken lines (written in the offhand conversational style of his Midwestern and Appalachian characters) sneak through the back door of your imagination and won't leave. So where does the regret come in? Well, as you listen to the 41 songs arranged chronologically on these two CDs, you're going to ask yourself, "If someone can write 41 songs as good as these, isn't there a good chance he wrote more than 41?" After hearing the anthology's six songs from Prine's 1971 debut album, for example, you may decide to go out and buy that album itself. After you hear songs as delightful as "Pretty Good" and "Your Flag Decal," which didn't find their way into the collection, you may soon find yourself hunting down all 10 of Prine's original studio albums. Then you may regret having bought Great Days. --Geoffrey Himes

Product Details:
Audio CD Release Date: August 17, 1993
Studio: Atlantic / Wea
Number Of Discs: 2
Average Customer Rating: based on 52 reviews
Track Listing:
Disc: 1
1. Illegal Smile
2. Spanish Pipedream
3. Hello in There
4. Sam Stone
5. Paradise
6. Donald and Lydia
7. Late John Garfield Blues
8. Yes I Guess They Oughta Name a Drink After You
9. Great Compromise
10. Sweet Revenge
11. Please Don't Bury Me
12. Christmas in Prison
13. Dear Abby [Live]
14. Blue Umbrella
15. Common Sense
16. Come Back to Us Barbara Lewis Hare Krishna Beauregard
17. Saddle in the Rain
18. He Was in Heaven Before He Died
19. Fish and Whistle
20. That's the Way That the World Goes 'Round
21. Bruised Orange (Chain of Sorrow)
Disc: 2
1. Sabu Visits the Twin Cities Alone
2. Automobile
3. Killing the Blues
4. Down by the Side of the Road
5. Living in the Future
6. It's Happening to You
7. Storm Windows
8. One Red Rose
9. Souvenirs - Steve Goodman, John Prine
10. Aimless Love
11. Oldest Baby in the World
12. People Puttin' People Down
13. Unwed Fathers
14. Angel from Montgomery [Live] - John Prine, Bonnie Raitt
15. Linda Goes to Mars
16. Bad Boy
17. Speed of the Sound of Loneliness [Live]
18. It's a Big Old Goofy World [Live]
19. Sins of Memphisto
20. All the Best
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

4John Prine One of America's great singer song writers  Oct 25, 2009
Listening to John Prine brings back memories of seeing him at a venue in Princeton NJ in 1973. He came on stage with a sixpack of beer and 2 wooden stools. One for the beer and one for him and he sang and drank and played for two and a half hours. When the beer was finished so was his act and he left the stage with the audience wanting him back for an encore, which he provided. This antholgy proved to me that John Prine is one of of the great American singer songwriter poets of the Baby Boomer era. I sang along with both of the CDs and placed them on my MP3 Player. Not all of the tunes were of good recorded quality but this is a must have production for my collections. Considering all I have are his vinyl record albums, this set is a good investment. Just like "fishin and Whistlin in heaven" !

4Great Days  Sep 09, 2009
John Prine's music is an an acquired taste. One needs to be patient with the early roughness in Prine's voice and music style. At first glance Prine seems like a garage mechanic who found a tape recorder and started singing. But as the listener hears the songs the second and third times, Prine's insights into culture and society become more apparent. He has a midwesterner's realism in his music that can be appreciated readily by other midwesterners. He laments the loss of childhood dreams and family vacation spots. He recognizes drug abuse among military personnel. Not all people are attractive. Indeed, listening to John Prine is like spending the afternoon in the midst of everyday people.

This two disc set covers Prine's career into the 1990s. While he's done additional work since then, not much of his work has been commercially successful. Commercial success never seems to be high on Prine's adjenda, and his fans appreciate his music regardless, but greatest hits usually resonate with more than die hard fans. So what this anthology represents is the highlights of Prine's career. His songs about drinking, life, divorce, under achievers, etc. all find their way into this set. Anyone remotely interested in John Prine will find music of value herein.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5If you like Pop Idol then,"move along theres nothing to see here"  Jul 06, 2009



As one of the other reviewers mention i've come to John Prine through cover version of his songs.Most notably the Alabama 3's and Nanci Griffith's versions of Speed Of The Sound Of Loneliness.It was largely due to the high regard that Nanci Griffith clearly has for John Prine that inspired me to purchase what has become an instant favourite.As the Amazon review states tracking down his other albums will indeed become essential but the only regret is that i never discovered him sooner.

I grew up listening to my parents country albums in the 60's and 70's but it was the more mainstream "Nashville" sound which was popular.The more "honest" if you like ,and grittier fare of the likes of Prine and his contemparies such as Guy Clark,Rodney Crowell and the man credited with his discovery,Kristofferson had to wait for me to discover them years later.As such i've come to such performers through various routes,Kristofferson via the obvious Johnny Cash connection Clark through John Prine himself and Prine largely through the covers mentioned above.

In the last few years i've explored various so called singer/songwriter's work and John Prine stands up alongside the best of them.Always one for a funny ,humourous lyric he strikes just the right chord for me with his infectiously off-centre wordplay as illustrated in song like The Sins Of Mephisto.In the sleevenotes he says he wrote the song to accomodate the phrase "exactly odo Quasimod". You just have to hear a song that has come from such an off-kilter genesis to see if it works,which it joyfully does.This collection is littered with highlights but some of the stand outs for me are Sam Stone which shows his darker side with such heartbreaking lyrics as "theres a hole in daddys arm where all the money goes" proving he can be profound as well as entertaining.For all the merits of songs such as Sam Stone though for me its the more comical side of his work that appeals as its good to have someone to listen to who always puts a smile on your face.Some personal favourites are Illegal Smile,It's A Big Old Goofy World and the seriously funny Dear Abbey.

One more reason for buying this album if this and the other reviews havn't already convinced you.You have to hear how anyone can make a song title like "Come Back To Us Barbara Lewis Hare Krishna Beauregard" actually work!

0 of 4 found the following review helpful:

1Where is my music?  Jun 07, 2009
I have not received this item and have had no luck navigating the help menu.

5Hello In There  Dec 11, 2008
Over the last several months I have done more musically-oriented reviews that I had expected. One of the themes that have kept cropping up is that for some folk/blues-oriented musical artists like Bob Dylan my attachment was immediate, long time and on-going. For other artists like John Prine it has been more of a recently acquired taste. In fact, my first acquaintance with the work of John Prine, at least that I was aware of, was several years ago when I was requested to get a couple of his CDs for a friend for Christmas. Upon listening to those albums, including this compilation, we both agreed that the best bet was to return them and get something else. Go figure.

I had, obviously, heard Bonnie Raitt do his "Angel From Montgomery" long ago but I never associated his name with that song. Then a couple of years ago I happened to listen to his "Hello In There" and "Sam Stone". Anyone whose has been affected by the Vietnam War experience in any way will gasp after hearing this very personal take of the destructiveness of that war for many of those who fought it, found hard drugs and found the black hole as a result. If you want to hear a real anti-war song rather than something wistful like "Where have All The Flowers Gone?" and the like then listen to this one. Yes, this guy has something to say that I wanted to (and on some songs, needed to) hear.

This compilation represents a very wide selection of his best work, arguably the best representation of that work in one location that you could get. Mr. Prine is a good guitar player, a very, very good wordsmith who has produced some poetic turns of phrases here that will have you thinking for a while. Moreover on, for example, "Dear Abby" he can show his "silly", nonsensical side. He also frankly, has the wry sense of humor (in the classical Greek sense of that word) of a man who has been pushed around by life, has pushed back; taken his beatings, dusted himself off and gotten back up again. You know, just the kind of guy that I, and I am sure other guys and gals of a certain age, very definitely can relate to, and in some cases like that above-mentioned "Hello In There" need to relate to. If you have just one John Prine album to get this is the one. Then start saving your dough to get the others.

In addition to the songs mentioned above listen to his cover of "Killing The Blues" and Steve Goodman's "Souvenirs". Also "Unwed Fathers", "The Late John Garfield Blues" and "Sweet Revenge".


 
 
Bestsellers
Shakira: Oral Fixation Tour [Blu-ray]Shakira: Oral Fixation Tour [Blu-ray]
After wrapping up her world-wide sold out Oral Fixation Tour, Shakira is back with the LIVE CONCERT Blu-ray that captures it all. Viewed by over 2M people in 36 countries, Shakira delivers all of her smashes, such as "La Tortura"(featuring Alejandro ...
List Price: $29.98
Our Price: $16.99
You Save: $12.99 (43%)
Add to Cart
Across the Universe [Blu-ray]Across the Universe [Blu-ray]
Across the Universe, from director Julie Taymor, is a revolutionary rock musical that re-imagines America in the turbulent late-1960s, a time when battle lines were being drawn at home and abroad. When young dockworker Jude (Jim Sturgess) leaves Live ...
List Price: $38.96
Our Price: $15.49
You Save: $23.47 (60%)
Add to Cart
Underworld Trilogy (Underworld / Underworld: Evolution / Underworld: Rise of the Lycans) [Blu-ray]Underworld Trilogy (Underworld / Underworld: Evolution / Underworld: Rise of the Lycans) [Blu-ray]
Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE
List Price: $92.95
Our Price: $47.49
You Save: $45.46 (49%)
Add to Cart
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore



About Us   Contact Us   Privacy Policy   Shipping Policy
Free Shipping on Orders $25 and Up!

Copyright ©2009 SONY MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT. All rights reserved.