| | Erasure Chorus CD Erasure Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
1991's CHORUS was a transitional album, as Erasure built on the musical and lyrical advances of 1989's WILD! and reached towards the more melancholy, mature work of 1994's I SAY I SAY I SAY. Andy Bell exploits his remarkable vocal range throughout, moving effortlessly from a lower-register growl to falsetto wails. Similarly, Vince Clarke's melodies and arrangements integrate the Hi-NRG electronic beats and synthesizers of the band's earliest work with the more reflective, organic sound of their later releases.
The title track, a danceclub hit in both England and the United States, is a delight, but the more ruminative "Am I Right?" and "Breath of Life" are sturdier songs. Aside from the delightful tribute EP ABBA-ESQUE and the singles collection POP!, this was Erasure's last release for over three years.
Live Recording
Recorded at Polygone Studios, Toulouse, France and Chateau Du Pape, Hamburg, Germany.
Erasure: Andy Bell (vocals); Vince Clark (various instruments).
Purchase Chorus CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Erasure I Say I Say I Say CD (1994)
Chorus album
$5.95 Erasure's first full album for three years, 1994's I SAY I SAY I SAY is a mature, often melancholy effort. It builds ...
| | Depeche Mode Some Great Reward CD (1984)
Chorus CD music
$7.29 Depeche Mode's U.S. breakthrough album, 1984's SOME GREAT REWARD, expanded the U.K. synth band's American following from a small cult of Anglophiles to the same sort of teenage adulation that the Cure had started attracting around the same time. Featuring the Top 20 U.S. hit "People Are People," along with cult faves such as the intensely mopey "Blasphemous Rumours," the fashionably S&M-tinged "Master and Servant," and the disarmingly earnest love ...
| | Erasure Wonderland CD (1986)
Chorus music CDs
$6.09 The album is the template ...
| | Depeche Mode Music For The Masses CD (1987)
Chorus songs
$9.25 One of the bands that not only dominated the charts for most of the 80s, but they also typified the type of music that will be looked back on as 'the sound of the 80s'. Their sometimes Germanic electronic pop became softer on this album. They were becoming more of a band, and they were 'rockin', just a little. Keyboards still dominated but the melody seemed less regimented. Vocalist Dave Gahan excelled, as his voice grew in power. In a year or two they would become stadium rock stars, and change forever. The reissued CD had a number of excellent bonus tracks including some interesting remixed material.
Initially the title must have sounded like an incredibly pretentious boast, except that Depeche Mode then went on to do a monstrous world tour, score even more hits in America and elsewhere than ever before, and pick up a large number of name checks from emerging house and techno artists on top of all that. As for the music the masses got this time around, the opening cut, "Never Let Me Down Again," started things off wonderfully: a compressed guitar riff suddenly slamming into a huge-sounding percussion/keyboard/piano ...
| | Erasure The Innocents CD (1988)
Chorus album
$9.29 Erasure's third album, 1988's THE INNOCENTS, features the US breakthrough hits "A Little Respect," and "Chains of Love," and is a welcome departure for the duo. With this release, Vince Clarke and Andy Bell move away from ...
| | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
Chorus CD music
$6.39 This audio document of The Corrs' Dublin homecoming concert has pretty much everything fans of Irish pop could wish for, including an appearance from Bono in his earthly incarnation, fresh from an audience with President George W. Bush. It's to the band's credit that the charismatic singer fails to steal the show, despite creditable efforts via an anthemized version of Ryan Adams' beautifully downtempo "When the Stars Go Blue," and a great, leering rendition of Lee Hazlewood and Nancy ...
| | They Might Be Giants John Henry CD (1994)
Chorus music CDs
$5.79 For their fifth full album of new material, the duo of John Linnel and John Flansburgh (who are They Might Be Giants) expand their lineup into a full-fledged band. They'd been touring as such for a year or two prior to the making of this album ...
| | Sunbury 1973 - 1974 (Re-Release) CD (2002)
Chorus songs
$26.79
| | Jeff Black Tin Lily CD (2005)
Chorus album
$12.19 Jeff Black has won a solid rep for writing impressionistic songs that are smart without forgetting the emotional undercurrent, and Tin Lily should deepen that feeling. The slow-rolling "Easy On Me" works like an updated, less sexist version of Dylan's "It Ain't Me Babe."Black's narrator doesn't want commitment any more than Dylan's, he just has a nicer way of putting it. "Hollow of Your Hand" is more prosaic, evoking the open road and the American landscape without getting too specific. Is he living in the shadow of a lover's hand? Or perhaps someone -- a singer or a writer -- who's come before him? In the end, the identity matters less than the impression of "farmlands of southern Illinois" opening up ...
| | Lilium Short Stories CD (2003) Bonus DVD
Chorus CD music
$15.29
| | DJ Fresh Escape From Planet Monday CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Chorus music CDs
$24.95
| | Guitar Tribute To Arctic Monkeys CD (2006)
Chorus songs
$9.99
| | Eddy Meets Yannah Once In A While CD (2007)
Chorus album
$14.59 There are a number of European cities widely known for the fertile excitement of their dance music scenes, but up until now Zagreb (capital city of Croatia) has not really been among them. But Yannah Valdevit and Eddy Ramich seem ready to change that. This is their second album, and it finds them continuing to explore the cool soul, funk, and nu jazz textures that have made them ...
| | Radiohead Amnesiac CDs (2001) Collector's Edition
Chorus CD music
$19.15 This Limited Edition of AMNESIAC includes a clothbound book with embossed logo and a 32-page full color booklet.
The Limited version of AMNESIAC won the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Recording Package.
This second helping from the sessions that produced the preceding KID A will probably strike close listeners as a bit more structured, though it'll be difficult to determine whether that's simply because the peregrinations of the last album have prepared them for the trips to the outer limits taken here. Those expecting a U2-like return to tuneful, anthemic guitar-rock will have their hopes dashed upon a ...
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