Moments (Dsd Remastered) by Boz Scaggs: CD Cover

    Moments (Dsd Remastered) Boz Scaggs

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    CD - Remastered

    • Release Date: 03/15/2005
    • Original Release: 1971
    • Sales Rank: 64,699
    • Label: SONY JAPAN
    • UPC: 4571191050144
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    CD - Remastered$36.99
     
    • Overview
    • Tracks
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Details & Credits
    Track List
    Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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    Moments (Dsd Remastered)

    1We Were Always Sweethearts
    2Downright Women
    3Painted Bells
    4Alone, Alone
    5Near You
    6I Will Forever Sing (The Blues)
    7Moments
    8Hollywood Blues
    9We Been Away
    10Can I Make It Last

    About this Artist

    Editorial Reviews

    If his 1969 eponymous debut found Boz Scaggs digging down deep and creating some gritty soul-rock, highlighted by Duane Allman's extended work-out on "Loan Me a Dime," his 1971 follow-up Moments -- his first album for CBS -- found him sketching out the blue-eyed soul that would eventually bring him fame when he streamlined it for 1976's Silk Degrees. Boz Scaggs was a Southern record, but Moments is thoroughly Californian, sun-bleached and brightly colored, easily gliding along smooth surfaces. In the hands of producer Glyn Johns, Scaggs doesn't have any rough edges, and the change suits him well, as his soft, soulful croon almost cries out for a setting this lush, one that's just this side of being louche. Although Scaggs would go that down the gauche road in the '70s, Moments is far from the glitzy disco of Silk Degrees and its spawn. This is thoroughly a '60s hangover, right down to how the country shuffle of "Alone, Alone" slides between the warm soul grooves of the rest of the album. Most of this is decidedly laid-back -- the casually funky grind of "I Will Forever Sing (The Blues)" and slyly funny boogie of "Hollywood Blues" callbacks to the Southern strut of the debut, are the exception, not the rule -- and while this is mellow, it's not lazy: it's a relaxed exploration. By the time "Can I Make It Last (Or Will It Just Be Over)" quietly drifts away on extended instrumental coda, setting like a sun into the ocean, Scaggs has started down the path toward his signature blue-eyed soul. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

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