Rave On Buddy Holly

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (73 ratings)
Rave On Buddy Holly album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 51:38

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Good mix, great songs

DontWannaNicknameDammit

This is a nice mix of new people and established ones -- at least three generations of rockers all doing Buddy Holly. Well worth the purchase. It's a very fun album and will make you want to listen to the originals.

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Rave on indeed

Bisquik

An excellent album with some terrific surprises and maybe a few duds but beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I think the modern artist take and in some cases re-interpretations were all interesting even if they did miss on rare occasion. The highlights are the Black Keys and Cee Lo Green with many other great performances.

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"Rave on about this album "

BLUESMAN4EVER

Really glad this was on E-MUSIC but,before I could get my downloads I puchased it at a store.Either way it's a great album with some fantastic artists doing great versions of Buddy's music.Since I live very close to the SURF Ballroom it was a must have.If your ever in north IOWA and you like this music,you owe it to yourself to visit the SURF.It has a great history for music fans and not just because it was Buddy's last show ,along with the big bopper and ritchie valens.The place is a great venue to see aconcert still.Now listen to this album and reminis about what might have been and if thats not enough,come see the SURF!

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All homeruns

ricardo222

except for the pitifully hip vocal butchery of Lou Reed. Fiona Apple, McCartney, Nick Lowe? Brilliant.

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Strong selection of new artists

teachcaine

Great selection of artists. I had heard about this CD on NPR, and I was hoping that it would come to EMusic.

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They Say All Music Guide

In some respects, Rave On Buddy Holly is a standard tribute album: it salutes a legend by rounding up classic rockers and hipsters to cover his canon, a practice that has been in place for nearly a quarter-century. In another regard, Rave On Buddy Holly is quite different. Encouraged by producer Randall Poster, the 19 artists involved do not settle for mere replications of Buddy’s hits, they play fast and loose, sometimes radically reinterpreting the original. Often, the effort is appreciated even when the rearrangement doesn’t quite work, as on Karen Elson’s overly ornate “Crying, Waiting, Hoping” or Lou Reed’s turgid grind through “Peggy Sue.” Yet even if these particular cuts don’t click, they nevertheless sound faithful to both the artist and Holly, a trick that’s usually not pulled off on tribute albums yet often is here. This is as true of Nick Lowe’s casually straight-ahead “Changing All Those Changes” as it is of Florence & the Machine’s “Not Fade Away,” which strips the tune of its signature Bo Diddley beat, and the pleasures of the album lie in discovering which direction an artist choose to follow: to discover Julian Casablancas turning “Rave On” into a Phrazes for the Young outtake, to hear Kid Rock try to wrestle “Well All Right” into the confines of a Stax stomper, to hear Modest Mouse work a handful of tempos into “That’ll Be the Day,” to hear Paul McCartney go inexplicably batty on his slow-grooving “It’s So Easy.” – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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