| | Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 CD Big Bopper Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
The Big Bopper's real name was J.P. Richardson.
Hellooo Baby!: The Best of the Big Bopper, 1954-1959 is a single-CD compilation of the Big Bopper's finest, including "Chantilly Lace," "Little Red Riding Hood," and "Big Bopper's Wedding." It's wild and fun. ~ Cub Koda Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 Music Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 Songs | 1. | Chantilly Lace |
| 2. | Big Bopper's Wedding |
| 3. | Little Red Riding Hood |
| 4. | Walking Through My Dreams |
| 5. | Beggar to a King |
| 6. | Crazy Blues |
| 7. | White Lightnin' |
| 8. | Big Bopper's Woogie |
| 9. | That's What I'm Talking About |
| 10. | Pink Petticoats |
| 11. | Monkey Song |
| 12. | It's the Truth Ruth |
| 13. | Preacher and the Bear |
| 14. | Someone Watching Over Me |
| 15. | Old Maid - (bonus track) |
| 16. | Strange Kisses - (bonus track) |
| 17. | Clock, The - (bonus track) |
| 18. | Purple People Eater Meets the Witch Doctor |
| 19. | Tennage Moon |
| Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 Music Review Buy Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 CD Purchase Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Aguirre, The Wrath Of God DVD (1973)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 album
$12.85
| | Swimming With Sharks DVD (1995) Widescreen
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 CD music
$10.29
| | Hard Eight DVD (1997) Widescreen
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 music CDs
$9.79
| | Multiplicity DVD (1996) Full Frame; Keep Case
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 songs
$9.79
| | One Night At Mccool's DVD (2001) Widescreen
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 album
$16.89
| | Skin Deep DVD (1989) Widescreen
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 CD music
$9.85
| | Cobra Verde Viva La Muerte CD (1994)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 music CDs
$11.59
| | Brick Layer Cake Whatchamacallit CD (2002)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 songs
$13.05
| | Forty Fives Fight Dirty CD (2002)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 album
$11.19 Playing the sort of retro-flavored bar rock that generally comes from having an immaculate vintage record collection, Atlanta's 45's count acts like the Reigning Sound, Them Wranch, Cheater Slicks, and Compulsive Gamblers as kindred spirits. Like those acts, the 45's are dishing out the sound of pure rock & roll, without the color-coordinated pretentiousness ...
| | Lou Pride Memphis/El Paso Sessions 1970-73 CD (2003)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 CD music
$14.69 Kudos to the Severn label for not only reviving the career and releasing new music from this under-the-radar '70s soulman, but for compiling this 13-track set of his earliest singles. These sides, recorded in the titular cities and time span, were only available as 45s and have become sought after collector's items for good reason: they smoke. Although Chicago bred Lou Pride ...
| | Wind River Collection CD (2003)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 music CDs
$7.25
| | Sammy Davis, Jr Ultimate Rat Pack Collection: Live And Swingin' CD (2003)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 songs
$20.95 Recorded live at The Villa Venice Night Club, Chicago, Illinois between November 26 & December 2, 1962. Includes liner notes by Bill Zehme.
In 2001, THE RAT PACK LIVE AT THE SANDS was released, a live album from the early 1960s capturing the onstage antics of notorious cohorts Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Dean Martin. ...
| | M83 Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts CD (2003)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 album
$9.69
| | Kathy Valentine Lightyears CD (2005)
Hellooo Baby!: The Best Of The Big Bopper, 1954-1959 CD music
$13.69 Given the higher profile of Belinda Carlisle and Jane Wiedlin's solo careers, it's easy to forget that the last of the original Go-Go's to join the band had by far the most impressive pedigree. Besides a stint in nearly every first-wave punk band in her native Austin, Kathy Valentine came to the Go-Go's via her time in the cultily beloved Textones (the first band to record Valentine's signature song, "Can't Stop the World"), and her appearance in the band coincided with their leap from third-string L.A. punk novelty to one of the most commercially successful punk-inspired bands of their era. Lightyears came out a full two decades after the band's protracted dissolution and a couple of half-hearted reunions, but it's easily one of the solidest solo records by any ex-Go-Go. A well-made collection of smart, mature pop songs given clean but not overly slick arrangements and production, Lightyears isn't any kind of revelation, really; Valentine was always second only to Wiedlin as a songwriter in the Go-Go's, and while these 12 songs are uniformly strong, there aren't any outright power pop masterpieces. The big surprise is that Valentine, who has never been a lead singer in any of her previous gigs, turns out to be a terrific vocalist. Songs like the swell, Beatlesque "Getting By" are enlivened by Valentine's flirty, sly delivery, and she handles ballads like the dreamy "Happy Endingless" and tough-cookie rockers like the snarling "Retouch Me" as handily as unexpected detours like the wiggily psych-dance-pop of the title track. After all this time, it turns out that the best singer in the Go-Go's was the party-girl redhead who stayed in the back out of the limelight. Who knew? ~ Stewart Mason
As one-fifth of the platinum-selling band the Go-Go's, KATHY VALENTINE helped smash the gender barrier in rock 'n roll. Not just a band made up of girls, the Go-Go's were a girl group with the emphasis on group, and among the constant and unmistakable strengths of their sound were Kathy's muscular and melodic bass lines, which gave those shimmering harmonies and smart hooks their urgent and undeniable pulse. She also co-wrote two of the band's biggest hits, "Vacation" and "Head Over Heels." Oddly enough, for such a well-known bassist, Kathy actually started out as a guitar player in Austin, Texas. She made her way to London, England and joined a band, but returned home more revved up and excited about the punk and new wave bands that were happening there. Moving to Los Angeles, she played in the Textones before hooking up with the Go-Go's in 1980. When the Go-Go's disbanded, Kathy put together a succession of bands, but it was the rocking Bluebonnets and Delphines that really gave her a chance to pursue her first passion -- guitar. Check out the Delphines' CD, "Cosmic Speed" and you'll hear the echoes of those countless nights she snuck into Austin nightclubs ...
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