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2006 Gift Guide

Our editors have selected the very best in new DVDs, music, and video games for holiday giving.

(Page 7 of 7)



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John Lee Hooker – Hooker ($59.98)

Without John Lee Hooker there would have been no guttural howling into microphones by long-haired '60s British singers trying to sound dangerous and seductive. Hooker never had to try. His music is it – the source. There's the sound of his foot tapping a wooden pallet in time with his guitar, the abrupt silences between notes, the gravel-tinged voice that rumbles with menace and longing. What is wonderful about Shout! Factory's four-disc compilation "Hooker," is that it demonstrates the musical sophistication behind his trademark foot stompin' boogie. The set takes the listener through Hooker's finest material – raw and deeply felt. The original "Boogie Chillen" that made Hooker famous is here, along with "Sally Mae," "Crawlin' King Snake," "Boom Boom," and "It Serves Me Right to Suffer." Disc 4 covers his collaborations with famous admirers including Van Morrison, Eric Clapton, Bonnie Raitt, and more. They wisely follow his lead.

Sinatra: Vegas ($59.98)

According to legend, all the casinos loved it when Frank Sinatra performed in Las Vegas. He brought the glitterati and high rollers to town. For Sinatra, who played Vegas hundreds of times between 1951 and 1994, the gambling mecca in the desert was his kind of town, the place where he felt most at ease. This snazzy five-disc set (four CDs and one DVD) contains previously unreleased live Vegas recordings spanning 1961 to 1987. By 1961, Francis Albert Sinatra, the skinny teen idol, was a distant memory. Ol' Blue Eyes was entering the most iconic period of his career, when the Chairman of the Board and his Rat Pack were the kings of '60s cool – at least for those too old to be in the thrall of The Beatles and Stones. These recordings let us hear and see a more unvarnished Sinatra, a singer who forgets or flubs lyrics and engages in comic patter with his audience. Many of the songs most identified with him ("Come Fly With Me," "That's Life," "My Way," "It Was a Very Good Year") are here, sometimes more than once, giving fans a chance to compare his approach over the years. Throw on one of these discs, and you're transported to a front-row seat at the Sands or Caesars Palace. Sinatra's in town, baby, and you're where the action is.

Robert Plant – Nine Lives ($99.98)

When Led Zeppelin disbanded in 1980, its lead singer shelved his primal scream in favor of singing that was more emotional, more reflective, more nuanced. The vocalist with golden hair and a golden throat set course on a highly individualistic journey in which none of his nine solo albums sound alike. "Nine Lives" collects all of Plant's albums (including his 1950s-style R&B project under the pseudonym of "The Honeydrippers"), and what's striking is how consistent the diverse body of work is. Not all of it has withstood the ravages of time and fashion – the 1988 hit album "Now & Zen" sounds neither now nor zen – but the highlights, such as 1993's "Fate of Nations" and last year's "Mighty Rearranger," are five-star records. The set includes rare material – an unreleased '80s demo called "Turnaround" is a terrific find – as well as a DVD that includes music videos and a long interview in which Plant reflects on his quest to continually break fresh ground.

Joanne Ciccarello, Clayton Collins, Gloria Goodale, Stephen Humphries, John Kehe, Gregory M. Lamb, Teresa Méndez, and Yvonne Zipp contributed to this guide.

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