| | Ronnie Spector She Talks To Rainbows CD Ronnie Spector Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
 |
|
Our Price: $8.95 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
|  |
Features one of Joey Ramone's last collaborations and a cover of The Beach Boys' "Don't Worry Baby" which was originally written by Brian Wilson in 1964 for Ronnie Spector and The Ronettes.
Former Ronette Ronnie Spector has had a long yet uneven career since the girl group effectively disbanded in the mid-1960s, after her marriage to its producer and Svengali figure, Phil Spector. This late-1990s offering finds her still in good voice over three decades later, on a set that features "Bye Bye Baby," one of the last recordings of the legendary punk rock singer, Joey Ramone, before his death in 2001. In a further nod to the New York punk scene to which she was an icon, Spector also covers Johnny Thunders' "You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory," giving it a surprisingly poignant reading, and, acknowledging her '60s roots, revisits Brian Wilson's classic "Don't Worry Baby."
Her 1st Solo Record Since '89
Recorded at Baby Monster Studio, New York, New York & live in Tokyo, Japan.
Personnel includes: Ronnie Spector, Joey Ramone (vocals); Daniel Rey (guitar, bass, percussion); Cindy Laverty (piano); Jeremy Chatzky (bass); Roger Murdock, Andy Korn (drums).
Personnel: Ronnie Spector (vocals); Daniel Rey (guitar, percussion); Joey Ramone (guitar, background vocals); Roger Murdock, Andy Korn (drums); Cindy Mizelle (background vocals).
Recording information: Baby Monster Studios, New York, NY.Rolling Stone (10/28/99, p.104) - 3.5 stars out of 5 - "...The Voice is back with her first record in more than a decade....It's rock & roll as Holy Communion." Entertainment Weekly (9/17/99, p.80) - "...She sounds more fragile than belligerent now, and her bruised, cracked vocals work wonders on the Beach Boys' 'Don't Worry Baby'..." - Rating: B- She Talks To Rainbows Music Ronnie Spector She Talks To Rainbows Songs She Talks To Rainbows Music Review Purchase She Talks To Rainbows CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Dangerous, 1976-1987 CD (1996)
She Talks To Rainbows album
$17.55
| | Something's Gonna Happen: Ronnie Spector Sings Marshall Crenshaw CD (2003)
She Talks To Rainbows CD music
$6.99
| | Stooges Heavy Liquid CDs (2005) (Import) United Kingdom
She Talks To Rainbows music CDs
$72.65
| | Traveling Wilburys Collection CDs (1988) With DVD
She Talks To Rainbows songs
$19.99
| | Nick Lowe Jesus Of Cool: 30th Anniversary Edition CD (1978) Reissue; Digipak
She Talks To Rainbows album
$12.55
| | Atari Teenage Riot Future Of War CD (1997) Import
She Talks To Rainbows CD music
$11.99
| | Mr Wright Hello Is Anyone Out There CD (2001)
She Talks To Rainbows music CDs
$12.39
| | Phantom Limbs Displacement CD (2003)
She Talks To Rainbows songs
$9.05 Oakland's Phantom Limbs have returned with Displacement, the finest example yet of the quintet's blasphemous organ punk. Suggesting the Murder City Devils if they had listened to parlor music backwards or collaborated with famous Bay Area Satanist/organist Anton LaVey, the Phantom Limbs are as adept at scaring listeners as they are at rocking them. Stevenson Sedgwick's frantic church organ sound twists seductively around the spine of each song (the trunk of each apple tree?), as perpetually tortured vocalist Loto Ball screeches couplets like "I hate the wounded man/Who staggers/Into ...
| | Tywanna Jo Baskette Fancy Blue CD (2003)
She Talks To Rainbows album
$9.79 An album as unusual as Tywanna Jo Baskette's debut cannot help but draw polarizing reactions: either you ...
| | White Christmas CD (2005)
She Talks To Rainbows CD music
$6.29 On January 1, 2005, all commercial recordings made during 1954 passed out of copyright and into the public domain in Europe, where copyright protection extends only 50 years. Among those recordings was the "soundtrack" album for the movie musical White Christmas, starring Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye, originally released by Decca Records, and the British budget reissue label Prism Leisure has lost little time in releasing its own unlicensed version of the album. The word "soundtrack" is rendered within quotation marks for two reasons. First, even as late as 1954, Decca's soundtracks tended to consist of separate studio recordings of the songs from a film, not the actual performances heard in the movie, and that was true of White Christmas. Second, there were cast substitutions from screen to phonograph; co-star Rosemary Clooney, who recorded for a rival record label, was replaced by Decca artist Peggy Lee, and Trudy Stevens, another Decca contract singer, subbed for the movie's non-singer Vera Ellen (who had already been replaced vocally in the movie by someone ...
|
|
|