Posts Tagged ‘back’
This product works pretty well! I used it for a 6-hr trip with two large mountain bikes and as long as the straps were tight and correctly mounted in place, there were no problems. It is important to put the rack on correctly, there was a little confusion on how to mount it to my sedan trunk. It didn’t give the best directions, but with a little trial and error, it worked out perfectly. It doesn’t fit three bikes unless one or two of them are tiny road bikes or kids’ bikes. All in all, it is reliable and very affordable!
Bell Triple Back 3
Fantastic album. As I said in my review title, this is a rare gem in a sea of crappy copycats and sound-alikes; in a world where everyone is trying to release a sound that sounds like everyone else sounds (does that make sense?), Amy Winehouse releases a throw-back to better musical days.
This album is a confirmation of the fact that good music will never die, even if dead music continues to live. The smooth R&B/blues/soul/jazz sounds are Mo-town all over again. And I am thrilled.
I am a musical purist and I don’t care for much of what is released these days, but this album is a wonderful exploration of the old sounds with an updated groove and a funky edge.
Every song is at least good. In my humble opinion, the standouts are “Rehab”, “You know I’m No Good”, “Back to Black”, “Tears Dry On Their Own”, “Some Unholy War”, and “He Can Only Hold Her”.
To carry that one step further, I would point to true, amazing standouts as “ME & MR. JONES”, a slow groove with motown like backing vocals and thick leading vocals from Amy. A true treat for the ears.
Also, “JUST FRIENDS”. This has to be the BEST SONG ON THE ALBUM. A smooth, rasta-infused jazzy upbeat tune, slow and easy. This gal is amazing.
Man, can you say Lauryn Hill, Billie Holiday, Etta James? This lady has a beautiful future if she sticks with what got her to this point. Her vocals are purely classic, thick and textured like few others can. She has placed herself at the pinnacle of musical history, not just modern music.
Simply stated, this album is sardonic, muddled, ironic, melancholy rantings of an alcoholic (recovering or admitted, I’m not sure) siren.
A must have for any pure music lover.
I am very picky about music, sticking mostly to classics (classical, classic rock, mo-town, big-band, swing, blues or jazz) but this album breaks through the monotony of the typical crap of today and shines brightly.
WITHOUT A DOUBT, THIS SHOULD BE ALBUM OF THE YEAR AT THE GRAMMY’S. WON’T SURPRISE ME IF SHE’S OVERL
Back To Black