| | Rozz Williams Neue Sachlichkeit CD Rozz Williams Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Live Recording
Arrangers: Ace Farren Ford; Rozz Williams.
Personnel includes: Rozz Williams; Ace Farren Ford; Christian Omar Madrigal Izzo (drums).
Personnel: Rozz Williams (vocals); Aaron Schwartz (harp); Christian Omar Madrigal Izzo (percussion).
Rozz Williams Neue Sachlichkeit Songs | 1. | Neue Schlichkeit |
| 2. | Gleichschaltung |
| 3. | Doubtful Origins |
| 4. | Enemy, The |
| 5. | Faith & Separation |
| 6. | Frozen Roads |
| 7. | Firestorm |
| 8. | Blut und Ehre |
| 9. | Flusterwitze |
| 10. | Schane Dich |
| 11. | Gotterdammerung |
| 12. | Great King, The |
| 13. | Stille Nacht |
| 14. | ...And Not Look Back |
| Neue Sachlichkeit Music Review Purchase Neue Sachlichkeit CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Debbie Gibson Electric Youth CD (1989)
Neue Sachlichkeit album
$5.95 Following up her enormously popular debut, Out of the Blue, Debbie Gibson sought to grow from the teen fan base she had established, while not alienating those who made her a household name. The result is slickly produced teen pop, like her debut, but it's not as squeaky clean or as compulsively likable. That is not to say it's a bad album. "Lost in Your Eyes" is a pretty ballad that showcases her songwriting skills, her clear voice, and her talent on the piano. "Electric Youth" is a bouncy, frenetic song that is ridiculously sing-alongable, but at the same it is time hard to really identify with it unless you're 12 (or at least young at heart). "We Could Be Together," in which she basically tells her friends and family to go fly a kite, is practically anthemic in its joy at taking a risk on love: "I'll take this chance/I'll make this choice/I'll give up my security/for just the possibility/that we could be together/for a while." It's teen pop at its best: it makes you feel young, it makes ...
| | Debbie Gibson Greatest Hits CD (1996)
Neue Sachlichkeit CD music
$9.09 Say what you will about the slickly produced teen pop of the late '80s and its revival in the late '90s: Debbie Gibson made some of the best of either era. Her best material (nearly all of which she wrote herself) displayed superior pop craftsmanship at a surprisingly young age, and she was no slouch as a producer or arranger, either. Perhaps that's why Greatest Hits still sounds so much less calculated and contrived than a lot of the artists working similar territory. Rant and rave all you want about corporate ...
| | Best Of Tracey Ullman CD (1991)
Neue Sachlichkeit music CDs
$9.99 Metro's The Best Of showcases Tracey Ullman's new wave and girl group-inspired music, including her brilliant, Kirsty MacColl-penned single and Top Ten hit "They Don't Know About Us." Though her covers of songs like the Waitresses' "I Know What Boys Like" and Blondie's "(I'm Always Touched By Your) Presence, Dear" aren't quite up to par with the originals -- ...
| | Essential Cyndi Lauper CD (2003) Remastered
Neue Sachlichkeit songs
$6.75
| | Great Cyndi Lauper CDs (2003) Import; Boxed Set
Neue Sachlichkeit album
$19.79
| | God Bless The Go-Go's CD (2001)
Neue Sachlichkeit CD music
$9.69
| | Chumbawamba Uneasy Listening CD (1999)
Neue Sachlichkeit music CDs
$11.49
| | King Karma CD (2004)
Neue Sachlichkeit songs
$16.45
| | Rick Cordes Missin' The Point CD (2003)
Neue Sachlichkeit album
$8.69 Missin' The Point: Don't Miss Itby Alan MonaschRick Cordes is a two-fisted songwriter and performer with a huge heart, who keeps both hands on the wheel as he drives us through his world on his new CD, "Missin' the Point." Appropriately enough to at least one of its themes, I first listened to this magnum of opus on a midnight drive from L.A. to the Bay Area. It was perfect driving music, from the opening ambient traffic sounds to the powerful close, much of the drive coming from the drum and bass work credited to Joe Barnett on percussion and keyboards, even more coming from the drive of the lyrics and chord structure of the songs. There is not a lot of instrumental frippery on these fourteen songs, all Rick's originals, that comprise the CD. The remarkably well-recorded, arranged and played acoustic guitar and vocals, all by Rick himself, are sometimes given carefully-arranged, lush production with the addition of piano or synthesizer parts (Barnett again, one assumes). This is an altogether professional outing; there is nothing in the music that seems at all off the point, and the packaging, graphic design, and lyric book are nothing short of professional.As for the songs themselves, they can be grouped into a few categories. First and foremost of these are the songs about the working man attempting to keep pace in an increasingly difficult world of bills, responsibilities, taxes and other everyday concerns. "Missin' the Point," being the title cut of the CD, elucidates this theme best, offering advice to those who are moving too quickly and mindlessly to notice that there are roses, no less stop to admire them ("A change of heart that's what you need/Stuck in a bad American dream/You're missin' the point.")Also in this category is the song mentioned on the cover (and a graphically sumptuous car-themed cover it is, too,) "Movin' to Mars," where Rick, tongue planted in his humor-loving cheek, even when making a serious point, says, "Tired of runnin' scared and losing pace/Need to break away from the human race/Find me a home in outer space, where there ain't nobody in my face." This song is so professionally produced it's almost scary, in a Martian sort of way, but it makes me hope that Rick doesn't make good on his relocation plan."Same Old Song" (work sucks) and "I Want My Money, Too" (taxes suck, too) complete this group. I can't help but hope that this CD gets Rick out of the rat race and into the studio permanently.There are four songs I think of as kind of character studies; three are uproariously satirical. The straightforward one, "Small Town Superstar," extols the virtue of Johnny, a local bass-playing favorite big fish in a small pool who adamantly likes where he lives and doesn't hunger for the bright lights."Calls Himself a Cowboy" is just hilarious, and I find that I don't want to give away the reasons. I really like way Rick dissects this Starbucks-totin' slicker with spot-on observations and interesting turns of phrase.Another car afficionado is given her due in "She Drives Her New BMW," in which an L.A. probably-wannabe is skewered and roasted to perfection for our entertainment. Also in this group is "The First Time We Met," where the joke is on the narrator, who spends the ...
| | Todd Washko Going Somewhere CD (2004)
Neue Sachlichkeit CD music
$11.15 Four years after the release of his debut CD, "going somewhere", Todd Washko returns with a new cast of characters and a deeper, richer sound ...
| | Jupiter Crash Skin Before The Art CD (2007)
Neue Sachlichkeit music CDs
$12.09
| | Osborne Brothers: Live In Germany DVDs (2007)
Neue Sachlichkeit songs
$19.29
| | Plight Black Summer CD (2008) (Import)
Neue Sachlichkeit album
$11.29
| | Ghost In The Machine Haunting Begins CD (2000) Enhanced CD
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$5.55
| | Joseph Arthur Crazy Rain CD (2008) Extended Play
Neue Sachlichkeit music CDs
$5.55
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