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iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Time the Conqueror

Jackson Browne

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Jackson Browne

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Time the Conqueror Jackson Browne 5:26 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Off of Wonderland Jackson Browne 3:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 The Drums of War Jackson Browne 6:13 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 The Arms of Night Jackson Browne 4:34 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Where Were You? Jackson Browne 9:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Going Down to Cuba Jackson Browne 5:44 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Giving That Heaven Away Jackson Browne 6:24 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Live Nude Cabaret Jackson Browne 4:16 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Just Say Yeah Jackson Browne 5:50 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Far from the Arms of Hunger Jackson Browne 5:17 $0.99 View In iTunes

iTunes Review

Though Jackson Browne made his reputation in the 1970s as a sensitive Southern California singer-songwriter, he has always infused his music with an environmental and social consciousness that eventually tipped towards the outwardly political in the 1980s. Though in the ensuing decades he has slowed his output considerably, Browne still writes with great care and precision. He makes pointed attacks at current world situations (the ominous extended modest funk that haunts the Katrina-concerned “Where Were You,” the soulful menace of “The Drums of War”), yet still manages to express a sense of hope and wonder. Sometimes it’s the nostalgia underpinning “Off of Wonderland,” where the 1960s bounce between the optimism of soon to be pursued dreams and the uncertain dangers lurking, or the smooth balladry of  “Going Down to Cuba,” a trip made before the U.S. embargo. He explores the carnal side that’s left after a day of fretting over the world situations (“Just Say Yeah,” “Live Nude Cabaret”). Browne doesn’t attempt any real musical surprises; he’s just checking in and letting us know where he’s at as he notices how time marches on.

Recent Customer Reviews

Another Well Crafted Album
     
by novice snob

Another solid effort from Jackson Browne. He covers familiar themes and sounds for most part, and I'll admit it feels like a step back from Naked Ride Home to me, it stll is a pretty good effort. It is more political than his last album too, which I think is not as heavy handed as his mid-late 80s material but still a little hit or miss for me. But if you're reading this none of this should surprise you. A fine addition to anyone's Jackson Browne collection.

JB delivers the truth without rose colored glasses.
     
by Naimawan

The first time I listened to “Time The Conqueror” it opened up a chasm inside me that has been filled with sadness for a long time. JB has always been a generous songwriter. With this album he articulates, in his own inimitable style, my own thoughts. Many things he sings about on this thoughtful album address issues near and dear to my heart—the war for profit, our national shame about Katrina, our collective xenophobia, and so on. All that, and beautiful music too!

I love Doctor My Eyes, Rock Me On The Water, The Pretender, Running on Empty, Fountain of Sorrow, etc. as much as any diehard JB fan. But the songwriter can grow and change, can’t he? He’s in a different place now—so am I, and so are we all. If we don’t have the courage to truthfully assess ourselves, how can we expect others to take us seriously and follow our lead? JB calls it as he sees it, and I appreciate his honesty.

Stop...
     
by Kieker

He's so good when he writes introspective observations about life and the relationships around him. He's been pissed off poltiically since Reagan...probably had a hard time justifying the Clinton years (he's so purist...having a womanizer like Bubba in office I'm sure created internal conflict for him), and just became more angry with 'W' running the show. His idealism can be appreciated but it weighs so lightly against the pragmatic ways of the current world that he almost renders himself irrelevant as a 'protest' singer-songwiter. Jackson should go back to the mindful meanderings behind Fountain of Sorrow, Jamaica Say You Will, The Pretender, and write from that genre point...give up on writing about the madness of the world...it ain't gonna change.

Biography

Born: October, 1948 in Heidelberg, Germany

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

In many ways, Jackson Browne was the quintessential sensitive Californian singer/songwriter of the early '70s. Only Joni Mitchell and James Taylor ranked alongside him in terms of influence, but neither artist tapped into the post-'60s Zeitgeist like Browne. While the majority of his classic '70s work...
Full Bio