The Best American Travel Writing 2009
The Best American Travel Writing 2009
Save a lot of money by importing from the USA

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Seven Great Features and Benefits offered ONLY by the Unofficial Guides:
Beyond Disney: The Unofficial Guide to Universal Orlando ,SeaWorld and the Best of Central Florida

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Whether you’re an armchair traveler, a serious hamburger connoisseur, or a curious adventurer up for a road trip, Hamburger America will be your guide to reclaiming this precious slice of Americana.
No other food says “America” like the hamburger, and documentary filmmaker George Motz has made it his personal mission to save our nation’s unique burger identity. He has traveled across the country in search of the best burger joints – those that have survived outside the fast-food mainstream – and has documented their rich histories and one-of-a-kind taste experiences.
This edition of the book includes George Motz’s 1 hour documentary “Hamburger America” that profiles 8 burger joints across the USA.
Hamburger America: One Man’s Cross-Country Odyssey to Find the Best Burgers in the Nation

Amazon.com
The Originals languished on Motown’s roster until Marvin Gaye took an interest in their career in 1968. Soon he’d produced and cowritten two Top 5 soul hits for the smooth quartet. The doo-wop-influenced “Baby I’m for Real” and “The Bells” are hardly the only highlights of this compilation, though–”God Bless Whoever Sent You” and the later disco smash “Down to Love Town” are near classics that deserve the new light that falls on them here. Most rewarding for Gaye fans will be an early, unreleased version of “Just to Keep You Satisfied,” a song he later rewrote for Let’s Get It On. –Rickey Wright
The Very Best of the Originals

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Chaka Khan, Epiphany: The Best of Chaka Khan, Vol. 1
Epiphany: The Best of Chaka Khan, Vol. 1

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DISC 1 Johnny Cash – Ring Of Fire
Bob Dylan – I Threw It All Away
Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash – Girl From The North Country
Kris Kristofferson – Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’ll Ever Do Again)
Louis Armstrong and Johnny Cash – Blue Yodel #9
Stevie Wonder – Heaven Help Us All
Creedence Clearwater Revival – Bad Moon Rising
Linda Ronstadt and Johnny Cash – I Will Never Marry
George Jones – Medley (White Lightning with Johnny Cash, She Thinks I Still Care, Love Bug, The Race Is On)
Johnny Cash – Hey Porter
Waylon Jennings – Only Daddy That’ll Walk The Line
Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash – The Singing Star’s Queen
Waylon Jennings – Brown Eyed Handsome Man
Tammy Wynette – Stand By Your Man
Marty Robbins – Medley (Big Iron, Running Gun, El Paso)
Johnny Cash – Come Along And Ride This Train
Johnny Cash – As Long As The Grass Shall Grow
Johnny Cash – Man In Black
James Taylor – Sweet Baby James
Pete Seeger and Johnny Cash – Cripple Creek, Worried Man Blues
Johnny Cash – Sunday Morning Coming Down
Johnny Cash – Old Time Religion
Johnny Cash, The Carter Family, The Statler Brothers, Carl Perkins and The TennesseeThree – Daddy Sang Bass
Mother Maybelle and The Carter Sisters – Wildwood Flower
Neil Young – The Needle And The Damage Done
Johnny Cash and The Tennessee Three – Tennessee Flat Top Box
Joni Mitchell and Johnny Cash – The Long Black Veil
Johnny Cash and The Tennessee Three with Carl Perkins – Big River
DISC 2 Johnny Cash – I Walk The Line
June Carter Cash – A Good Man
Derek And The Dominos – It’s Too Late Derek And The Dominos with Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins – Matchbox
Charley Pride – Able Bodied Man
Bill Monroe And His Blue Grass Boys – Blue Moon Of Kentucky
Loretta Lynn – I Know How
Jerry Lee Lewis – Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On
Johnny Cash – Ride This Train (America The Beautiful, This Land Is Your Land)
The Everly Brothers with Ike Everly and Johnny and Tommy Cash – That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine
Ray Charles – Ring Of Fire
Johnny Cash – A Boy Named Sue
Conway Twitty – Hello Darlin’
Mother Maybelle Carter – Black Mountain Rag
Tony Joe White and Johnny Cash – Polk Salad Annie
Glen Campbell – Wichita Lineman
Neil Diamond – Cracklin’ Rosie
Ray Price – For The Good Times
Roy Orbison – Crying
Roy Orbison and Johnny Cash – Oh, Pretty Woman
Johnny Cash – Wanted Man
Chet Atkins and Johnny Cash – Recuerdo De La Alhambra
Chet Atkins – Medley (Country Gentleman, Mister Sandman, Wildwood Flower, Freight Train)
June Carter Cash with Homer And Jethro – Baby, It’s Cold Outside
Merle Haggard – No Hard Times
Merle Haggard and Johnny Cash – Sing Me Back Home
Carl Perkins – Blue Suede Shoes
Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, The Carter Family and The Statler Brothers – The Old Account Was Settled Long Ago
Roy Clark – Medley (In The Summertime, 12th Street Rag)
The Statler Brothers – Flowers On The Wall
Johnny Cash – Working Man Blues
Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash – Jackson, Turn Around, I Love You Because
Hank Williams Jr. – Medley (You Win Again, Cold Cold Heart, I Can’t Help It If I’m Still In Love With You, Half As Much)
Johnny Cash – A Wonderful Time Up ThereAmazon.com
Country and rock ‘n’ roll legend Johnny Cash hosted his own variety television series from the summer of 1969 to spring 1971, and by all accounts the weekly program was destination TV. The Johnny Cash Show: The Best of Johnny Cash 1969-1971 is an 83-minute summary of everything Cash tried to do in his hourlong format, from presenting an eclectic and even-handed overview of popular music to promoting a humanitarian perspective on issues that mattered most to him: drug use, poverty, reliance on faith, compassion for criminals.
This DVD documentary is largely comprised of musical performances by Cash and some of the many guests who appeared on his show. But there are also snippets of interviews with behind-the-camera talent involved with the program as well as such old friends as Kris Kristofferson and Hank Williams Jr. Everyone speaks highly of Cash’s warm, on-camera persona, and selected footage proves them right: Cash is ever the gentleman with an expansive spirit and down-to-earth grit. Musical highlights include Cash’s own “I Walk the Line” and “Man In Black,” Bob Dylan’s straightforward “I Threw It All Away,” Loretta Lynn’s “I Know How,” and a delightful George Jones medley. Ray Charles takes a bluesy spin on “Ring of Fire,” Cash’s fellow Sun Records artists Carl Perkins and Roy Orbison take turns in the spotlight, Neil Young brings the crowd to its feet with an amazing “The Needle and the Damage Done,” and Eric Clapton (fronting Derek and the Dominos) turns in a passionate “It’s Too Late.” –Tom Keogh
The Johnny Cash Show: The Best of Johnny Cash 1969-1971

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Media Type: CD
Artist: BASIA
Title: CLEAR HORIZON-BEST OF BASIA
Street Release Date: 11/17/1998
Genre: ROCK/POP
Clear Horizon: The Best of Basia

Amazon.com
It’s hard to have a more milquetoast image than Olivia Newton-John. Even when she was decked out in stretch pants and stiletto heels at the end of Grease, you never mistook her for a wild girl. Proudly carrying the torch once held high by Karen Carpenter, Newton-John embodied the safer and, yes, blander side of the ’70s and early ’80s. But just like Carpenter went on to be rehabilitated as a pop singer, Newton-John’s career deserves a second look–and this compilation is a good way to start. Even if the singer’s precise touch was audible as early as 1973 (on the countryish “Let Me Be There”), she reached her peak five years later with Grease and the torchy “Hopelessly Devoted to You.” “Physical” may be the best-known episode of the singer’s leg-warmer years, but the one to cherish forever remains “Xanadu.” On it, Newton-John basically fronted Electric Light Orchestra and the result is one of the most underrated songs of the past 25 years. –Elisabeth Vincentelli
Magic: The Very Best of Olivia Newton-John

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The very best of Linda Ronstadt packs a single CD with 21 Ronstadt classics released by Capitol and Elektra/Asylum from 1967-1993. 2002.Amazon.com
Linda Ronstadt, who emerged from SoCal’s vaunted early-’70s country-folk scene, became the American female rock superstar of the Me Decade. After the initial success of the Stone Poneys’ Michael Nesmith-penned “Different Drum,” Ronstadt expanded her horizons through interpretations of a long string of successful pop and R&B covers. Along the way she championed emerging songwriters like Warren Zevon (“Poor Poor Pitiful Me”) and contemporary favorites like Neil Young (“Love Is a Rose”) in the bargain. As the formula waned with the changing tastes of the ’80s, she briefly turned to new wave before stepping boldly back to the pop standards of the ’30s, ’40s, and ’50s. Unfortunately, this collection inexplicably skips over that three-album collaboration with arranger-conductor Nelson Riddle, a body of work that presaged the 1990s’ lounge-pop revival by a full decade–and outclassed it by miles. It also eschews a compelling contemporary Latin chapter of her career in favor of her winning collaborations with Aaron Neville (“Don’t Know Much” and “All My Life”) and less successful AC fodder like “Winter Light” and “Somewhere Out There” with James Ingram. A good primer to Ronstadt’s immense vocal talents and recording history, but one that’s flawed by some crucial missing chapters. –Jerry McCulley
The Very Best of Linda Ronstadt

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Main Ingredient, Everybody Plays the Fool: The Best of the Main Ingredient
Everybody Plays the Fool: The Best of the Main Ingredient
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