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Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings

Counting Crows

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Counting Crows

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 1492 Counting Crows 3:50 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Hanging Tree Counting Crows 3:50 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Los Angeles Counting Crows 4:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Sundays Counting Crows 4:21 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Insignificant Counting Crows 4:14 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Cowboys Counting Crows 5:22 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Washington Square Counting Crows 4:17 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 On Almost Any Sunday Morning Counting Crows 2:58 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 When I Dream of Michelangelo Counting Crows 3:10 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Anyone But You Counting Crows 5:24 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 You Can't Count On Me Counting Crows 3:16 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Le ballet d'or Counting Crows 5:00 $0.99 View In iTunes
13 On a Tuesday In Amsterdam Long Ago Counting Crows 4:57 $0.99 View In iTunes
14 Come Around Counting Crows 4:31 $0.99 View In iTunes
Booklet Digital Booklet - Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings Counting Crows Album Only View In iTunes

iTunes Review

As suggested by title of the Counting Crows’ first album in six years, Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings deals in celebration and contemplation. The album begins with the band driving hard; “1492” cruises like Pearl Jam. But by album’s end, singer Adam Duritz is nestled up alongside a piano wondering what it all means (“On A Tuesday Afternoon in Amsterdam Long Ago”) before pulling the band together for one final encore of classic rock togetherness (“Come Around”). The band’s louder moments are a tad brittle and Duritz’s plea for understanding his superstar life in “Los Angeles” a tad self-absorbed, but the band succeeds with the mid-tempo acoustic-based rock that brought them to national attention. “You Can’t Count On Me” has a sweet jangle and “On Almost Any Sunday Morning” perfectly replicates that “Sunday Morning Coming Down” that Kris Kristofferson once eloquently put into song. That’s where Counting Crows deliver on their promise as a no-nonsense band of the people.

Recent Customer Reviews

probably my favorite cd of this year.
     
by etaf_10

if you're reading this and you haven't bought the CD, stop reading this and buy it. if you already have it, then you don't need me to tell you how awesome this CD is. just get it.

Funtimes
     
by Questionable Dollar

This is not the greatest, most fantastic music I've ever heard, but it sure is fun! It's just pure, upbeat, fun. "Washington Square" is a definite winner. If you take one track from here, take "Washington Square". After that, take "1492".

Adam Duritz made one great album. This isn't it.
     
by sfarone

This is a good recording. The best the Crows have recorded since August and Everything After. Maybe better than Satellites. But it is no August. Not close.

People forget that when the Crows recordeed August they were not so much a Band but really just Adam Duritz and his first batch of songs with a band assembled by T Bone Burnett to record them. The kid had a bunch of amazing songs at the time and he sang them with pain and passion and it was an amazing recording! But that was a long time ago. The crows second album was a relatively weak revisiting of those same themes with a new producer and it did not equal August at all. Since then, much of what the Crows have done has sounded derivative, and they seemed to become just another pop band. (How many times can they re-release 'Rain King'? Their old material does not need re-recording. August was perfect.)

Saturday Nights has some great moments, many of which remind me of August and Satellites. Its good, but not much new here really. Listen to August and Everything After again and remember how rare it is when a record comes out as fresh and perfect as that one was.

Biography

Formed: August, 1991 in San Francisco, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s

With their angst-filled hybrid of Van Morrison, the Band, and R.E.M., Counting Crows became an overnight sensation in 1994. Only a year earlier, the band was a group of unknown musicians, filling in for the absent Van Morrison at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony; they were introduced by an enthusiastic...
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