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Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 46:27

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All good things that end must start somewhere

FabulousFu

Thanks emusic for this album. It has allowed me to fill out my D& B collection. Stax influence, while apparent, shows where they started and the influences they gave to the music of others. They are one of my all time favorites

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Southern R&B and Soul

Skydog7

This is a really grooving set that befits its name, "Home." While I'm partial to Motel Shot because of Duane Allman's playing on it, Home is D&B in their prime. Favorite tracks include Long Road Ahead, My Baby Specializes, and We Can Love.

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Nice surprise!

Druid

Downloaded this on a lark, great choice! I'm familiar with Delaney and Bonnie through their association with Clapton but didn't realize they recorded for Stax. Great southern rock with snatches of R&B influences.

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It all came back to me

Average-Nights-Jack

Wow, after listening to this all the memories from 1970 came flooding back. This is where country meets soul and becomes an inspiration for so many more to follow. Recorded on Stax, in Memphis with Booker T Jones and his band, some tracks still make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. Come on eMusic, please make the follow up and more commercial "Accept No Substitute" available.

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Agree with Howie

kjc

Bonnie Bramlett & Janis Joplin were in 2 different leagues. While Janis was fabulous and great, she was not known for harmonizing with others. She was more upfront, as everyone knows. Bonnie was a harmonizer, not only with her husband and the Ikettes, but she backed up Little Milton and others as well. Peice of My Heart is superbly recorded by Bonnie Bramlett, but one must realize they were 2 completly different artists in their own right.

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Wrong Track Order

LouHobbes

For the original lp tracklist, download tracks 6, 4, 8, 7, 15, 11, 2, 3, 16, 10, in that order. All the other songs are bonus. As for the music, it frankly reminds me a lot of Eric Clapton's debut solo album, which is a great thing. However, don't expect it to be as good as Clapton, just a similar sound. So, for me, it was just OK.

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not quite...

DEW1701

Not fab not horrible. Piece of my Heart just isn't grating enough to be a plausible remake. Piece of My Heart is one of my favoutite songs, don't get me wrong, but it's supposd to be a little tough on the ears. On the other hand you can actualy tell what she is singing.

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Bonnie is one of the greats!

HowieGreen

Bonnie Bramlett should have been right up there with Janis Joplin and Grace Slick as one of the all time great babe singers from the Sixties. Why she is almost unknown is a total mystery to me. She was such a hot performer that she was the only white woman to ever sing behind Tina Turner as an Ikette! This album was recored for Stax Volt the mostly Black artist lable who thought so highly of Delany and Bonnie they signed and released this album. It's a little tighter and missing some of the glorious rough edges that made their other albums so brilliant but its still totally worth owning just to hear their two voices together and, well any excuse to hear Bonnie sing is worth your time. "Things Get Better" is one of their classic songs with Bonnie's slow Southern drawl belting out the melody.

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Urban/Hip Hop????????

Bruss

huh? who came up with that?

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They Say All Media Guide

Delaney & Bonnie’s brand of soul-rock was firmly in place by the time of this 1969 album, the only one they recorded for Stax. Their following albums would gain greater exposure, but there’s not much difference between this record and those subsequent efforts, except perhaps that this is more soul-oriented and less rock-oriented. That’s not too surprising considering that members of Booker T. & the MG’s are playing on most of the cuts, though a few were done in Hollywood with Leon Russell on keyboards and Carl Radle on bass. The material was a mixture of original songs and compositions from top Stax writers such as Steve Cropper, Isaac Hayes, and David Porter, though generally the songs weren’t as grittily powerful or memorably hook-laden at the best stuff to come out of Stax in the late ’60s. The cover of “Piece of My Heart” was bound to pass relatively unnoticed in the wake of Janis Joplin’s wrenching hit cover of the song (with Big Brother & the Holding Company), and “Hard to Say Goodbye” seems like an attempt to push their sound in a slightly poppier direction, though not at all a bad one. [The 2006 CD reissue resequenced the tracks and added six bonus songs, as well as historical liner notes. The reason for resequencing the order is uncertain, but the six additional cuts are welcome, as their sound and quality fit in fine with the rest of the record. If there's any difference between the bonus material and the songs that found a place on the initial release, it's that there's a greater emphasis on original compositions. Of those, "Get Ourselves Together" and "All We Really Want to Do" are both well up to the standards of the tracks that had been included on the LP. They also pointed a little more in a rock direction, and slightly away from the faithful adherence to the Stax sound that characterized the sessions.] – Richie Unterberger

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