Traveling Wilburys - Vol. 1

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Traveling Wilburys - Vol. 1 album cover
Album Information
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  • Artist: The Traveling Wilburys (See All Albums by The Traveling Wilburys)
  • Date Released: Jun 3, 2008

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Rock

  • Label: Rhino

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 42:47

eMusic Review 0

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Melissa Maerz

eMusic Contributor

01.12.10
An unlikely pop success from pioneers of classic rock
2008 | Label: Rhino

Remember the days when record labels still believed that middle-aged dudes could form successful rock bands? These guys do. Bolstered by his big comeback with 1988′s Cloud Nine, George Harrison invited Tom Petty, Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan and Jeff Lynne to jam together — and ended up selling 3 million copies of their record, more than Dylan had racked up on any of his studio albums.

Which makes sense: this fun-loving mix of rockabilly boot-stompers and back-porch folk singalongs was the rare chance to see these ultra-serious icons just goofing off. Dylan spoofed Springsteen on “Tweeter and the Monkey Man,” sprinkling the Boss’s song titles into his tale of (what else?) two Jersey kids on the run. All five singers crack their best dirty-uncle double-entendres (“You don’t need your wax job, you’re smooth enough for me… let me drive your pickup truck and park it where the sun don’t shine.”) Even Orbison — the crown prince of anguished ballads — seems to lighten up on “Handle With Care,” teasing that, even as an old guy, “I still have some love to give!” Sadly, Orbison died two months before the album’s release, but since then, it’s gotten… read more »

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Quite possibly the best supergroup

banomassa

What happens when you take a group of guys who are some of the most gifted songwriters in recent memory? You get the Traveling Wilburys that's what. THis is one of the truly great records of the rock genre. Great songs at every turn, amazing performances, and lots of enjoyable fun moments. This is what a record sounds like when a group of friends get together for fun and make music. It's better when your friend are Roy, Dylan, Petty and George, but still you can hear the ease and fun which they recorded these songs with.

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Nuts if you don't get it

Solarte

"Handle with Care" was our first dance at our wedding 20+ years ago. Makes us happy. Such incredible talent!

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Absolutely perfect.

CAMEL

There is nothing more to say about this stunning and brilliant album. Get it. Crank it. Love it.

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Amazing talent, amazing line-up...

zolaris

but even more amazing is the boredom factor. A few good songs, but nothing on it compares to even the mid-list music from the individual members and their other bands.

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get twice the music

tsgksmfk

Another album offered by eMusic includes all the songs on this one (in the same order), plus another 12 for the same number of credits. I don't know if the shared songs are exactly the same recordings, but it seems likely, and the other album may not remain at 12 credits forever.

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They Say All Music Guide

There never was a supergroup more super than the Traveling Wilburys. They had Jeff Lynne, the leader of ELO; they had Roy Orbison, the best pop singer of the ’60s; they had Tom Petty, the best roots rocker this side of Bruce Springsteen; they had a Beatle and Bob Dylan, for crying out loud! It’s impossible to picture a supergroup with a stronger pedigree than that (all that’s missing is a Rolling Stone), but in another sense it’s hard to call the Wilburys a true supergroup, since they arrived nearly two decades after the all-star craze of the ’70s peaked, and they never had the self-important air of nearly all the other supergroups. That, of course, was the key to their charm: they were a group of friends that fell together easily, almost effortlessly, to record a B-side for a single for George Harrison, then had such a good time they stuck around to record a full album, which became a hit upon its 1988 release. Looking back, the group’s success seems all the more remarkable because the first album is surely, even proudly, not a major statement. Even under the direction of Lynne, who seems incapable of not polishing a record till it gleams, it’s loose and funny, even goofy. It’s clearly a lark, which makes the offhanded, casual virtuosity of some of the songs all the more affecting, particularly the two big hits, which are sunny and warm, partially because they wryly acknowledge the mileage on these rock & roll veterans. “Handle with Care” and “End of the Line” are the two masterworks here, although Roy’s showcase, “Not Alone Anymore” — more grand and moving than anything on the Lynne-produced Mystery Girl — comes close in the stature, but its stylized melodrama is a ringer here: it, along with Dylan’s offhand heartbreak tune “Congratulations,” is the only slow thing here, and the rest of the album just overspills with good vibes, whether it’s Tom Petty’s lite reggae of “Last Night,” Jeff Lynne’s excellent Jerry Lee Lewis update “Rattled,” or Dylan’s very funny “Dirty World,” which is only slightly overshadowed by his very, very funny Springsteen swipe “Tweeter and the Monkey Man.” These high times keep The Traveling Wilburys fresh and fun years later, after Lynne’s production becomes an emblem of the time instead of transcending it. [Rhino's 2008 reissue included bonus tracks.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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