Monday, January 21, 2008

Hank Mobley - Thinking Of Home - Rock Music CD Review

Thinking Of Home is the up-to-the-minute release from Rock Artist Hank Mobley, and I can only believe of one word to depict it… AWESOME!

Thinking Of Home will catch your attending right from the beginning with Suite: Thinking Of Home / The Flight / Home At Last and doesn't allow travel until the very last short letter of the very last song Talk About Gittin', which is another great path by the way.

Thinking Of Home have a pleasantly varied, premix of Suite: Thinking Of Home / The Flight / Home At Last paths that are very well written songs by this clearly outstanding artist. Most of the songs show a batch of the sort emotion that brands for a really great listen. Clearly drawing from what I can only conceive of are him have existent life experiences. At different points touching on the most existent emotions like love, heartbreak, pain, failed human relationships and unachievable romance. They're all here.

I give Thinking Of Home my peak recommendation. It just apparent belongs in any serious music aggregators aggregation regardless of genre preference.

While this full cadmium is really very good some of my favourites are path 3 - You Gotta Hit It, path 4 - Gayle's Groove, and path 2 - Justine

My Bonus Pick, and the 1 that got Sensitive [...as in "Stuck On REpeat"] is path 1 - Suite: Thinking Of Home / The Flight / Home At Last. Great track!

Thinking Of Home Release Notes:

Hank Mobley originally released Thinking Of Home on October 8, 2002 on the Blue Note Records label.

CD Path List Follows:

1. Suite: Thinking Of Home / The Flight / Home At Last

2. Justine

3. You Gotta Hit It

4. Gayle's Groove

5. Talk About Gittin'

Personnel: Hank Mobley (tenor saxophone); Woody Henry Wheeler Shaw (trumpet); Cedar Sir William Walton (piano); Eddie Diehl (guitar); Paddy Bass (bass); Leroy William Carlos Williams (drums). Recorded at avant garde Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on July 31, 1970. Originally released on Blue Note (40531). Includes line drive short letters by Sir Alexander Robertus Todd Barkan.

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