| | Camilo Sesto Serie 20 Exitos CD Camilo Sesto Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $9.69 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
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Camilo Sesto Serie 20 Exitos Songs Serie 20 Exitos Music Review Purchase Serie 20 Exitos CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Rammstein - Live Aus Berlin DVD (1999)
Serie 20 Exitos album
$13.89
| | Camilo Sesto Lo Mejor De Lo Mejor CDs (1999)
Serie 20 Exitos CD music
$17.15 2 Cds
| | Lo Escencial De Mana CDs (2001)
Serie 20 Exitos music CDs
$25.59
| | Mariachi Vargas De Tecalitlan Sinfonico CD (2005)
Serie 20 Exitos songs
$8.75
| | Camilo Sesto 20 Grandes Exitos CD (2006)
Serie 20 Exitos album
$9.89
| | Tito "El Bambino" It's My Time CD (2007)
Serie 20 Exitos CD music
$11.29
| | Steppenwolf 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection CD (2003)
Serie 20 Exitos music CDs
$8.39 Digitally remastered by Erick Labson (MCA Music Media Studios, North Hollywood, California).
This is part of MCA's 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection series.
The upteen millionth collection by Steppenwolf -- er, slight exaggeration but there are way too many -- is easily one of the best both in terms of sound and selection. While the ready made expectations are met with "The Pusher," "Born to Be Wild," "Magic Carpet Ride," and "Sookie Sookie," there are a few surprises as well, including "Screaming Night Hog," "It's Never Too Late," "Tenderness," and "The Night Time's for You." If only there would have been room for "Monster," "Move Over," and "Power Play." Alas. But as these things go, it's pretty great. Now if they'd only reissue Early Steppenwolf on CD we'd be all set. ~ Thom Jurek
Like any record company worth their salt, MCA knows a good gimmick when they see it, and when the millennium came around -- well, the 20th Century Masters -- The Millennium Collection wasn't too far behind. Supposedly, the millennium is a momentous occasion, but ...
| | Chuck E Weiss Old Souls & Wolf Tickets CD (2001)
Serie 20 Exitos songs
$10.59 Weiss, a crony of Tom Waits since the early '70s, has probably heard more than enough comparisons between his and Waits' music. It's nonetheless hard to avoid when describing Old Souls & Wolf Tickets, which has much in common with Waits' own fusions of hipster growl, blues, smoky after-hours jazz, and weird Americana. Just because it sound at times like a poor man's Waits, however, doesn't mean it isn't likable enough on its own terms. Weiss is considerably more steeped in Louisiana-styled R&B, backwoods blues, and Cajun music than Waits is, so what you get here sometimes sounds like an unholy cross between Waits and Dr. John. The New Orleans influence is no secret from the mere title of the opening track, "Congo Square at Midnight." Weiss' wizened, sly vocals are a good match for the off-kilter material, which stews together goofy, onomatopoeic wordplay with the kind of bemused boho world-weariness you would expect from his persona. Sometimes the goofiness crosses over to silliness, ...
| | Everafter Staring At The Sky CD (2005)
Serie 20 Exitos album
$11.39
| | Lori Hawk Alive In This Dream CD (2003)
Serie 20 Exitos CD music
$14.19
| | Barry Manilow Greatest Songs Of The Fifties CD (2006)
Serie 20 Exitos music CDs
$8.49
| | Brunner & Brunner Made In Austria CD (2007) (Import)
Serie 20 Exitos songs
$15.95
| | Coup Genocide & Juice CD (1994)
Serie 20 Exitos album
$9.59 A subtler and more fully realized effort than the debut, Genocide & Juice finds the Coup truly coming into their own, refining their mix of revolutionary politics and easy-rolling funk into some of the best political hip-hop ever put to wax. The main difference here is a richly developed cast of characters, as Boots and E-Roc put human faces on their beliefs, and paint sympathetic portraits of working-class African-Americans struggling to make ends meet any way they can, often stuck with little education and fewer options. Socialist ideology is rarely far from the surface, but because of the way it's presented, it seems just as logical in context as opposing racism. The opening three songs are intertwined together, and mark a quantum leap in the group's sophistication. "Fat Cats, Bigga Fish" introduces a small-time hustler scraping together a living; along with his cousin, he infiltrates a party for corporate fat cats, who happen to enjoy imitating rappers, and drop freestyles about their abuses of power on the screamingly funny "Pimps." Finally, on "Takin' These," the two hustlers rob the party blind, Robin Hood-style, chanting a chorus lifted from Lady and the Tramp's "The Siamese Cat Song." Just in itself, that trio is a tour de force, displaying a sharp satirical instinct that's rare in any form. Although there are a few missteps, the remainder of the album is more consistent than Kill My Landlord, which fell prey to some ...
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