Music
Store



Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Music » General » Time the Conqueror  
Music Home

  • Music Lyrics
  • Top 10 Music
  • New Music Releases
  • Music News


  • Movie Store
  • Book Store
  • Game Store
  • Software Store
  • Tool Store
  • Shopping Mall
  • Categories
    Music
    Music DVDs
    Musical Instruments
    Related Categories
    • General
    Pop
    Styles
    Music
    • Singer-Songwriters
    Pop
    Styles
    Music
    • General
    Rock
    Styles
    Music
    • CD Album
    CD
    Format (binding)
    Refinements
    Music
    • Main Album
    Edition (format)
    Refinements
    Music
    Time the Conqueror
    Time the Conqueror

    zoom enlarge 

    Other Views:
    Artist: Jackson Browne
    Label: Inside Recordings
    Category: Music

    List Price: $16.98
    Buy New: $9.75
    You Save: $7.23 (43%)



    New (55) Used (12) from $8.90

    Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 62 reviews
    Sales Rank: 168

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.8 x 0.3

    MPN: 18092
    UPC: 696751809230
    EAN: 0696751809230
    ASIN: B001C0NN7Y

    Release Date: September 23, 2008
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
    Condition: Factory Sealed Ships The Same Day

    Tracks:

      • Time The Conqueror
      • Off Of Wonderland
      • The Drums Of War
      • The Arms Of Night
      • Where Were You
      • Going Down To Cuba
      • Giving That Heaven Away
      • Live Nude Cabaret
      • Just Say Yeah
      • Far From The Arms Of Hunger

    Similar Items:

      • Covers
      • Little Honey
      • Solo Acoustic, Vol. 2
      • Gift Of Screws
      • Harps & Angels

    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    Browne's first studio release in six years. Recorded with his longtime band Kevin McCormick, Mark Goldenberg, Mauricio "Fritz" Lewak, and Jeff Young, along with two additional members, Chavonne Morris and Alethea Mills. Look for them on tour this fall.

    Album Description
    Browne's first studio release in six years. Recorded with his longtime band Kevin McCormick, Mark Goldenberg, Mauricio "Fritz" Lewak, and Jeff Young, along with two additional members, Chavonne Morris and Alethea Mills. Look for them on tour this fall. 10 tracks.


    Customer Reviews:   Read 57 more reviews...

    3 out of 5 stars Sometimes great, sometimes a bit dull   September 23, 2008
     47 out of 57 found this review helpful

    (3 & 1/2 stars) I was driving around today listening to the new JB CD and enjoying it - mostly. As other customers have said, it's always great to hear new music from Mr. Browne, and this one had its moments for sure. However, this was the first time I was a little tired of his political messages, and (worse) some of the songwriting felt flat to me. My top highlights included most of the poetic title track and the pensive "The Arms of Night" (classic Jackson). Some songs that never came to life for me were the Cuba song (a pretty weak JB tune), "Givin' That Heaven Away" (ho hum), and "Arms of Hunger." The latter number will either be received as a beautiful Browne ballad or a relatively boring trail-off. The musicianship IS excellent throughout, including the usual agelessly strong vocals from Jackson, but I don't think this will be one of his albums that I come back to very often. As for the political side... with songs about the war, Katrina, and even the Cuban embargo, at times listening to this CD felt a bit too much like reading The Nation. I fully understand that Browne the Activist is as much a part of the man as Browne the Troubadour, but I'm inclined to enjoy his music more "these days" when he stays closer to home with his subject matter.

    P.S., What about that startling cover photo!?! I did a double-take on that one, did you?



    4 out of 5 stars A welcome, if flawed, return.   September 26, 2008
     41 out of 47 found this review helpful

    TIME THE CONQUEROR is a mixed-bag of delights; I won't sugarcoat it. The album is heavy on the political, a knack that I wish Browne had left back in the 80s. Granted, if anyone is going to do political music, let it be rock's poet laureate...but still...when he cries "Why is impeachment not on the table/We better stop them while we are able," we can't help but wince. I mean, Jackson, there are just four months left...it's almost over...

    The political tunes (with one exception) aside, the rest of the album borders, occasionally, on brilliance. Take "Just Say Yeah," perhaps one of the best tunes to capture the innocence of young, unexpected love since...well...since Browne wrote about it a few decades ago. "You would think you would see love coming," he croons, "but of course you don't." Or the stellar "Live Nude Cabaret," a journey into one man's troubled desire that has an in-your-face opening that betrays the narrator's struggle: "I went to the Live Nude Cabaret/To see what I could see/And I saw the ladies dancing/And I guess that they saw me." "Giving That Heaven Away" is a tale of love and rock 'n roll, while "Going Down to Cuba" melds politics and the beach into a melodic, relaxing number, the ocasionally harsh political lyrics ("They might not know all the freedoms you and I know/But they do know what to do in a hurricane") sung with his tongue a little bit closer to his cheek.

    Considering the beauty and brilliance to be found in these tunes, it's disappointing that so much of the album is political. It's all VERY well written--don't get me wrong. Jackson Browne has long been the songwriter's songwriter; I think everyone reading this review knows and appreciates that fact. But even the greatest songwriter can get lost within his lyric every now and then..."Off of Wonderland," for example, an otherwise stellar tune, idolizes the 60s just a bit too much ("If we could just believe in one another/As much as we believed in John"), and "Where Were You" gets lost within its groove, so much so that you forget the lyrics are about the devestation caused by Hurricane Katrina, and Browne is bemoaning "How strong will we ever really be? How long do we imagine we'll be free?"

    TIME THE CONQUERER is a welcome return from Jackson Browne; it's nice to hear some new material again (though, personally, I hope he will continue with his SOLO ACOUSTIC series as well). There is a lot wrong with the world today, and it is natural for a songwriter as talented as Browne to write and sing about it. We just wish he wouldn't do it SO MUCH. When he's singing about the woes of our nation, he's good...but when he's singing about the woes of our hearts, he's brilliant. That's what makes TIME THE CONQUEROR so frustrating--there are moments of brilliance (and we know he's capable of whole albums of brilliance) obscured by something just this side of mediocrity. Jackson Browne is a true poet, and this is an album worth being added to your JB collection...but, if you are a beginner, then start elsewhere. Start, perhaps, at the beginning. It's as good a place as any, and better than some.



    4 out of 5 stars SUNRISE NOT SUNSET FOR JB   September 25, 2008
     28 out of 29 found this review helpful

    When Bruce Springsteen inducted Jackson Browne into the ROCK & ROLL
    HALL OF FAME a few years ago,he made an observation.His observation was that at a Jackson concert,there was ALWAYS a higher percentage of women
    than men in the audience.The Boss then concluded that even though Browne tried to hide it,he was a rock-n-roll SEX symbol.He went on to say that
    besides the obvious physical attraction,women were drawn to ol' JB because his songs gave the ladies a male perspective on the "game of love".Where is all this going you ask? I know I'll probably get trashed for this but...I feel TIME THE CONQUEROR is Jackson's first album that speaks directly to the male gender of the human species. Look at the cover of JB's 1972 debut with its soft image of Jackson on the cover with the "browne" background.A young coyote full of promise and ascension.Fast forward thirty-six years and look at the cover of his latest CD: a stark black and white image on a black background.Time the Conqueror!!! I read recently where someone wrote that at twenty years old,we have the face we're given but, at sixty years old,we have the face we've earned.What we have here is book-ends, ladies and gentlemen.TTC is a subdued album,there is no rock-n-roll, but I think that direction was on purpose.There are songs about the past,the future AND the present on this CD.Subdued is not the same as boring.Jackson left the top 40 behind a long time ago.The title song
    celebrates the fact that time heals all wounds but it also laments the fact that time will steal you blind.Two sides of the same coin,depends on how you toss it."Off Of Wonderland" and "Giving That Heaven Away"
    are songs that have Jackson looking behind his shoulder,at a world where anything AND everything was possible. "The Drums Of War" IS a powerful song,I just wish he would have sung it three or four years ago when
    public opinion was still sitting on the fence."Where Were You"
    comments on the inefficiency of the federal response to Hurricane Katrina .I live on the Texas Gulf Coast and we were just hit by Hurricane
    Ike a couple of weeks ago and the response by the local,state and federal governments was OUTSTANDING!!! So,in all fairness, the plight of New Orleans was a terrible lesson in emergency response but,it has gotten better."Live Nude Cabaret" is not as cheesy as it sounds.Like most
    men, Jackson remains enthralled by the wonderment of the female
    gender of our species."Just Say Yeah" chronicles the joy of finding that
    one special woman and enjoying the ride.Yeah,guys...this is Jackson's celebration of the male spirit.The good and the bad...but a celebration never the less. This TIME THE CONQUEROR may just become a classic.



    4 out of 5 stars Great to have a new JB CD   September 23, 2008
     20 out of 22 found this review helpful

    Well its been a while since Naked Ride Home. I think I preferred Naked Ride Home after the first few listens. I kept comparing this to the Long Road Out of Eden - Eagles. A couple of tracks invoked the same feelings.

    Stand out tracks for me were Going Down To Cuba + Just Say Yeah + Drums of War. A couple of tracks drifted away at the end and didn't finish well. Some of the lyrics were great, as you'd expect from Jackson. He used a slightly different rhyming technique in many songs. On the political song side - I don't think JB is on George W Bush's xmas list.



    2 out of 5 stars Really expected more   September 26, 2008
     20 out of 26 found this review helpful

    Jackson Browne is my favorite singer-songwriter. After a six year wait for a new studio recording, my expectations were high. But this disc was a major let down. The first major problem is the fact that four of the ten tracks are political in nature, but none of these songs really grab you like some of his previous political tunes (I Am A Patriot, Lives In The Balance, Casino Nation). Other reviewers have noted a second problem which is that the album is "boring." The main reason is because it doesn't rock as much as some of his previous tunes (Boulevard, Running On Empty, Looking East, etc.) Too many the tracks are laid back mid-tempo numbers (Arms of Night, Live Nude Cabaret) or ones in which he gets nostalgic about the 60's (Off of Wonderland and Giving That Heaven Away, although I do like the latter of the two). There are some gems. The title track and Just Say Yeah are classic Jackson Browne tunes. In fact, I think Just Say Yeah is one of his best. I just can't imagine going back and listening to this disc a year from now. I like tracks 1,7, and 9, but the rest of the album I really don't care if I ever hear again. Jackson Browne's sales really fell off with 1989's politically saturated disc "World In Motion," I feel this CD will be unpopular also. I am such a devoted Jackson Browne fan it was tough to write such a negative review, but I call them like I see (or hear) them.


    Proud member of the JimmyKat Network. Make sure you check out these other great JimmyKat network sites:

    Lyrics Database   Celebrity Blog   Celebrity Thing   Celebrity PC   Celebrity Latest   Celebrity Pro   Travel Photos   Quotes   Flash Games


    Is there a better
    price available?


    Find out: