| | Jay Hickman Making People Laugh CD Jay Hickman Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Making People Laugh Music Jay Hickman Making People Laugh Songs | 1. | Training Women / She's Not In The Mood / My Kidney Stone / Who You Calling "Boy"? / A Shark Can Smell Fear / Polish Coal Miner / Would You Love Me If I Were Broke? / What You Going To Name The Baby? / Viet Nam / The Parachute Won't Open |
| Making People Laugh Music Review Purchase Making People Laugh CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Jay Hickman Comedy's Bad Boy CD (1995)
Making People Laugh
$10.39
| | Jay Hickman Macho Man CD (1994)
Making People Laugh
$10.39
| | Jay Hickman Don't Hold Nothing Back CD (1997)
Making People Laugh
$10.39
| | Jay Hickman Playing Truck Driver CD (1990)
Making People Laugh
$10.49
| | Jay Hickman Duke Of Dirt CD (1994)
Making People Laugh
$10.15
| | Jay Hickman Boat Ride CD (1995)
Making People Laugh
$10.39
| | Holly Cole Trio Don't Smoke In Bed CD (2008) (Import) Import
Making People Laugh
$22.35
| | Day Of Less Ad Hoc CD (2002)
Making People Laugh
$8.55
| | Miriam Boyer Therese Raquin: Emile Zoila CD (2003)
Making People Laugh
$31.29
| | Blue Collar Comedy Tour Rides Again CD (2004)
Making People Laugh
$12.99 Jeff Foxworthy/Larry The Cable Guy/Bill Engvall/Ron White
Performers include: Jeff Foxworthy, Bill Engvall, Larry The Cable Guy, Ron White. With the WB's Blue Collar TV show showering success on three out of four of the comedians here, the Blue Collar Comedy troop sounds more comfortable and sure than ever. Being this relaxed suits their style, but the audience is anything but relaxed as their loud, unruly appreciation of the gang adds the needed excitement. Ron White -- the one who isn't a regular on the television show -- has experienced his own success with his They Call Me Tater Salad DVD and related albums. His lazy but highly entertaining set is the only one hurt by the CD's four-on-one formatting. White's country-Carlin, curmudgeonly delivery really works best when allowed to stretch its legs, but the bite-size sets suit the rest of the troop much better, making for a nuthin'-but-the-highlights laugh fest. Good old Foxworthy comes off better than he does on the TV shows since his dumbfounded-by-life monologues are more natural than his sketch comedy abilities. He's a kind Cosby type now, replacing his "You might be a redneck if..." with his "If you..." such and such "you're either gay or married" ("If you can't remember the last time you had sex with a woman, you're either gay or married."). The quality of his material is on the upswing with a high laugh factor, one that's matched by Bill Engvall's set. His "Spending Time Together" routine is choice Engvall as he explains the difference between men and women along with the separate interests of Southerners and Californians. It's up to BCTV's Larry the Cable Guy to really git-r-done, and git-r-done he does. His rather blue set requires more of his "Lord, I apologize" than usual, but it's a hilarious whirlwind of one-liners. A trip to the flea market with his flatulent grandmother provides Larry with a wealth of material, as does his riffing on former girlfriends. The closing "I Believe" is becoming the troop's theme song, and the version here is one of the best and silliest. White's set is too short, but everything else on Rides Again should satisfy the faithful and add to the Blue Collar Comedy Tour's already huge fan base. ~ David Jeffries When Jeff Foxworthy, Bill Engvall, Ron White, and Larry the Cable Guy joined comedic forces for the first Blue Collar Comedy Tour, no one could have predicted that it would turn into a cottage industry, spinning off into comedy albums and even a TV show. Nevertheless, the quartet's knack for illustrating the working man's foibles with hilarious abandon has proven enormously popular. Thus, we have the soundtrack to the Blue Collar Comedy Tour's theatrical debut. As expected, all four men are given space ...
| | World Leader Pretend Punches CD (2005)
Making People Laugh
$12.39 Live Recording
World Leader Pretend: Kit Liberty (vocals, guitar); Matt Martin (guitar); Parker Hutchinson (keyboards); Alex Smith (bass guitar); Arthur Mintz. Personnel: Keith Ferguson (vocals, guitar, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, glockenspiel); Blair Gimma (vocals); Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra (strings); Rebecca Barry (saxophone); Maurice Brown (trumpet); Molli Tate (French horn); Steve Sudor (trombone); Arthur Mintz (piano, drums, percussion, sleigh bell, background vocals); David Torkanowsky (piano). Additional personnel: Rebecca Barry (saxophone); David Torkanowsky, Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, Maurice Brown , Blair Gimma, Molli Tate, Steve Sudor. Audio Mixers: Mike Napolitano; Rich Costey; Ben Hillier. Recording information: Marcata Recording, New York, NY; Piety Studios, New Orleans, LA; Storyville, New Orleans, LA; The Nappy Dugout, New Orleans, LA. Photographer: Josh Rothstein. World Leader Pretend's debut album, Punches, is hands down one of the brightest albums of 2005. This New Orleans band, which rotates between four and five members, has composed a set of songs that boast desire, imagination, and a heavy heart. These 14 songs dance with an innocent energy that is without pretense. Only recently have bands such as Doves, Travis, and Keane made sounds akin to this that are embraceable enough for alternative rock. Finally, an American band pulls it off -- brilliantly no less. Album opener "Bang Theory" sets the album's golden tone with its majestic string and piano arrangements. From there, the more delicate "Tit for Tat" and "Love Dovey" highlight the band's overall boyish charm. "Dreamdaddy" and "New Voices" ...
| | Colezo! Twin Nippon No Syo CD (Import)
$29.99 | | Lightheaded Wrong Way CD (2006)
Making People Laugh
$10.19
| | Jean Topart Une Descente Dans Le Maelstrom: Edgar Allen Poe CD (2006)
Making People Laugh
$19.19
| | George Lopez El Mas Chingon CD (2006)
Making People Laugh
$13.15 Personnel: George Lopez (spoken vocals). Audio Mixer: Mark Linett. Recording information: The Icehouse, Pasadena, CA. Editor: Mark Linett. Photographers: Michael Schwartz; Bob Freeman; Robert Sebree. After a tumultuous year (2006)that included a kidney transplant, superstar comedian George Lopez returns to his old haunt, the Ice House, in Pasadena, California--where he recorded TEAM LEADER--to record this live stand-up romp, EL MAS CHINGON. The material is classic Lopez--an incisive, politically incorrect view of growing up poor and Latino in America. Much of it focuses on his family and their foibles--like an aunt who tells him that he'll end up on the street, which he translates as his newly unveiled star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame--but he also manages a few timely digs at George W. Bush. Recorded live at the Icehouse in Pasadena, CA, El Mas Chingon (The Baddest) finds comedian George Lopez in familiar territory. While he breaks no new ground, Lopez delivers fresh material that would fit comfortably on any of his other CD releases. Whether remembering ...
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