| | Rock'N Learn Division Rock CD Rock'N Learn Discography of CDs
Division Rock Music | Category | Children's Albums | | Label | RNL | | CD Universe Part number | 1147142 | | Catalog number | 941 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Apr 05, 2000 | | Additional Info | Blister Packaging; CD W/Book |
Rock'N Learn Division Rock Songs | 1. | Let's Split |
| 2. | It's A Breeze |
| 3. | Division Avenue |
| 4. | Rock 'n 'Learn Train |
| 5. | Divide Time |
| 6. | Seven's Up |
| 7. | 8 The Whole Thing |
| 8. | The Great Divide |
| Division Rock Review
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Purchase Division Rock CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Tarzan CD (1999) Original Soundtrack
Division Rock album
$9.65 All songs written by Phil Collins. Original score composed by ...
| | Rachel Buchman Shine Little Candles: Chanukah Songs For Children CD (2000)
Division Rock CD music
$14.15
| | They Might Be Giants Here Come The 1,2,3'S CD (2008) With DVD
Division Rock music CDs
$15.59
| | Little Prince CD (1974) Original Soundtrack
Division Rock songs
$13.85 After more than a decade apart, the team of composer Frederick Loewe and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, famous for such shows as Brigadoon, My Fair Lady, and Camelot, reunited for two final projects in the early 1970s. The stage adaptation of their 1958 movie musical Gigi, with five newly written songs, ran on Broadway from November 1973 to February 1974. But before that, they had come up with nine songs for Lerner's screenplay to a film version of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's children's story The Little Prince that finally reached movie theaters in December 1974. Like Lerner's previous film versions of his shows Paint Your Wagon (1969) and On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1970), The Little Prince was released into the market at a time when movie audiences were not much interested in screen musicals. ...
| | Doors Live In Pittsburgh 1970 CD (2008)
Division Rock album
$15.65
| | Happy Feet CD (2006) Original Soundtrack
Division Rock CD music
$10.79
| | Millie Jackson I Had To Say It CD (1980)
Division Rock music CDs
$10.29 Over the years, Millie Jackson has often been compared to Etta James and Denise LaSalle -- and both are valid comparisons. Another frequent comparison is Gladys Knight, who was a major influence on Jackson. But while Knight and Jackson have a similar vocal texture, you would never hear Knight delivering the type of sexually explicit monologues that Jackson became known for in the 1970s. Knight would never be as in your face as Jackson, whose wild sense of humor serves her well on I Had to Say It. This 1980 LP gets off to a hilarious and irreverent start with the title song, a rap number that finds Jackson attacking everyone from welfare queens to black men who refuse to date ...
| | Chuck Berry/More Chuck Berry CD (2002) (Import) United Kingdom
Division Rock songs
$17.79
| | Richard Butler CD (2006)
Division Rock album
$14.45
| | Mirage Tomorrow Never Knows: The Pop Sike World Of The CD (2006) (Import)
Division Rock CD music
$17.39
| | Disney Collection, Vol. 4 CD (2006)
Division Rock music CDs
$10.49
| | Loyal To The Grave Most Wanted 168th Infantry CD (2006) (Import)
Division Rock songs
$23.65
| | Foghat CD (2008) (Import) Rock & Roll; Japan
Division Rock album
$24.59
| | Hawkwind Love In Space CDs (2003) Bonus Tracks; Reissue
Division Rock CD music
$19.39 A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, a band emerged from the bitter end of the '60s, a group seeded by the ideals of the hippie/acid scene with feelers reaching into the spacy side of Krautrock, while germinating an aggressive sound all its own. Hawkwind's ability to forge their own path, yet remain open to incorporating new styles of music that grew up in their wake, is legendary, and never more apparent than on this double album. Originally released in 1996 and recorded live during the band's 1995 Alien 4 tour, this is not the sound of a 25-year-old band limping around stage lost in space and time, but a defiant celebration of everything Hawkwind had accomplished and were still set to do. Simultaneously embracing the contemporary electronic scene and the omnipresent long-haired rockers, the band burns brightly at both ends; never has the group sounded so futuristic, yet so thoroughly modern. The much revisited "Death Trap" is a revelation, a storming rendition boasting all the hyper-energy of Motörhead and the spit and fire of first-wave punk; this is what early Ultravox aspired to (the two, song and band, are contemporaries) but never quite reached. A lush take on "Wastelands" was an equal object lesson to post-punkers and the new-breed electro bands, gorgeously shadowed and providing the perfect intro to the even spacier "Are You Losing Your Mind?" until that number kicks into overdrive. It's this phenomenal mix of punk rock fury and glorious, gilded electro soundscapes that perhaps best defines the band -- and never more so than on the spectacular title track, a nearly ten-minute extravaganza that effortlessly melds together a plethora of styles and ages, a musical time capsule launched into outer space. In contrast, Hawkwind cheekily deconstruct "Silver Machine" down to its barreling R&B roots, time traveling back to the early days of rock & roll. Prophetically, the set ends with the Arabic-flavored "Assassins of Allah" whirling like dervishes through the shadows, grinning like wolves at their hapless victims, and sliding seamlessly into a ferocious "Space (Is Their Palestine)." In today's climate, the final pair of songs is like a punch to the gut. All these years on, this two-disc set still can take your breath away. Not only hasn't it dated one iota; it sounds even more modern and forward-looking now than when it was first released. The Esoteric reissue appends a trio of tracks from the band's highly sought-after Love in Space EP -- a remix of "Love in Space," the jubilant "Lord of Light," and the anarchic "This Is Hawkwind Sonic Attack," the latter two's muddy live sound quality barely interfering with their power. ~ Dave Thompson
Digitally remastered and expanded edition of this 1995 live album from the British Space rockers. Originally ...
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