| | Laibach Sympathy For The Devil CD Laibach Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
This EP features seven versions of the Rolling Stones song "Sympathy For The Devil." Mixed in are borrowings from classical composers (Wagner, Shostakovich) and quotations from the Rolling Stones and President Kennedy.
Part of Laibach's two-pronged attack on rock & roll via two of its most omnipresent icons -- the Beatles' Let It Be being the other source of ire -- Sympathy for the Devil is indeed a collection of versions of the Rolling Stones song. The weirdly ecstatic shimmer and shake of the original gets demolished and reconstructed thoroughly, Laibach's by-now trademark approach of Wagner-ian stomp and bombast and growled vocals turning the tune into something else again. If the alternate versions were just remixes of a core take, Sympathy for the Devil wouldn't be half as interesting as it is, but Laibach demonstrates their abilities with a range of approaches throughout, always seeming like they're laughing with and at their potential audience at the same time. Some are more straight-up industrial/electronic body music takes for clubs -- spiked with the de rigueur samples expected for such things, including song subject John Kennedy and spoken bits from the Stones themselves -- while others have the hints of psychedelia from the original's era, including bits of sitar and the like. Sometimes the lyrics are delivered in harrowing, strained German, other times in guttural English, the "woo-woos" turn into wordless invocations of marching doom. Hilariously and presumably intentionally cheesed-out corp rock guitar crops up here, weirdly creeped-out female vocals take the lead there, and the end result all seems perfectly calculated to make classic rock fans die several times over of coronaries. There is one near-instrumental non-cover, the dramatic swirling-string and vocalless-choir electronic rhythm assault of "Anastasia," but that also takes a fair amount of inspiration as the title indicates. In the end, seven versions of the same song are more than a little overwhelming, but as an extended experiment Sympathy for the Devil stands up more or less on its own two feet -- and the cover art is some of the most grimly hilarious stuff Laibach ever used. ~ Ned Raggett Sympathy For The Devil Music Laibach Sympathy For The Devil Songs Sympathy For The Devil Music Review Purchase Sympathy For The Devil CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ornette Coleman Beauty Is A Rare Thing: The Complete Atlantic Recordings CDs (1993) Box Set
Sympathy For The Devil album
$76.49 Digitally remastered by Stephen Innocenzi (1993, Atlantic Studios, New York).
All songs written by Ornette Coleman except "Embraceable You" (George Gershwin/Ira Gershwin), "Abstraction" and "Variants On A Theme Of Thelonius Monk" (Gunther Schuller).
BEAUTY IS A RARE THING was nominated for Best Album Notes in the 37th Annual Grammy Awards.
BEAUTY IS A RARE THING contains Ornette Coleman's entire surviving recorded output for the Atlantic label from 1959-1961 (a number of other sessions were recorded, but they were destroyed, along with countless other priceless Atlantic masters, in their infamous warehouse fire of the mid-1970s.) BEAUTY IS A RARE THING features over seven hours of music, six previously unreleased tracks, and contains a booklet of photos, a discography and contemporary commentaries by Ornette Coleman and a host of supporters and detractors.
This epic 6-CD set chronicles the joy and controversy that distinguished alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman's coming out party on Atlantic Records. Coleman was a transplanted Texan, a jazzman steeped in the blues, who struggled throughout the '50s on the Los Angeles scene just to find people to play with--let alone to accept his very personal sense of pitch and form. A prodigious composer, Coleman had accumulated hundreds of tunes by the time he made his first ...
| | Laibach Kapital CD (1992)
Sympathy For The Devil CD music
$10.95 Recorded as communism was collapsing in Eastern Europe and while the tensions of the various Yugoslav regions were about to boil over into a brutal, years-long war, Kapital is Laibach's most extensive, longest individual album, a full CD's worth of sharp, pointed songs. Given the economic recession in place at the time -- likely inspiring the album's lead single, "Wirtschaft Ist Tot," or "Economy Is Dead" -- Laibach understandably regarded the new gods with all the disdain previously built up beforehand for the old ones. With the experiment in covering others' material behind them (at least temporarily), Kapital consists of all originals, crossing the familiar combinations of martial horns, jarring samples, barked singing, and strident orchestrations with a much more fluid use of electronic music (especially in terms of the rhythms, where the rough martial beats often give way to stripped-down breakbeat loops and pulses). Having long been identified with the industrial/electronic body music scene, by default if not always by direct intent, Laibach embraces the connection bodily here, experimenting with then-current techno styles here and there as well. It's a jarring combination in some instances but a strangely beautiful one in others -- if nothing ...
| | Laibach Let It Be CD (1988)
Sympathy For The Devil music CDs
$11.39 All tracks are cover versions of songs from the Beatles' LET IT BE album.
Probably the band's most famous release in the English-speaking world, Laibach's Let It Be -- unlike the Replacements' album -- didn't just name itself after the Beatles' swan song, it full-on covered every last bit of it, with the notable exception of the title track ("Maggie Mae" gets a Slovenian folk tune substituted for it). Having spent some time beforehand drawing any number of parallels of right-wing extremism with their home country's government and the West alike, especially when it came to the resemblance of big rock concerts to totalitarian rallies, all Laibach had to do was tackle what they felt was the Beatles' worst album. In some respects, Let It Be wasn't that hard of an effort -- songs like "Get Back," "I Me Mine," and "One After 909" simply had to have the Laibach elements applied (growled vocals, martial drums, chanting choirs, overpowering orchestrations, insanely over-the-top guitar solos) to be turned into bizarre doppelgängers. The sheer creepiness ...
| | Lady Macbeth Of Mtsensk DVD (1992)
Sympathy For The Devil songs
$18.89
| | Intimate Art Pepper CD (2000) Hybrid; SACD Hybrid
Sympathy For The Devil album
$23.45
| | Michael Jackson Thriller CD (1982) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Special Edition
Sympathy For The Devil CD music
$5.99 The finest example of perfect disco pop, and a record that should be prescribed to musical snobs and manic depressives. The album is a true ambassador of what pop music can be. Jackson whoops and dances through a suite of unforgettable melodies that should be danced to with a smile on your face. Each track offers at least one musical hook, whether it is the beauty of 'Human Nature' (who can resist the 'dada dada da da da') or the 'whoo whoo' of 'Billie Jean'. It's all too good.
Principally recorded at Westlake Audio, Los Angeles, California.
Additional ...
| | Shirley Horn You Won't Forget Me CD (1991)
Sympathy For The Devil music CDs
$8.05 Interestingly, Horn rarely takes a solo, but repeats the songs over and over, slightly changing the phrasing and continuously building on the piano to change the emphasis. Every cut is a masterpiece, but the stand out is the title cut. Drummer Steve Williams sets up a strange, repetitive quarter note pattern which sounds like a ticking clock over which Miles Davis' muted trumpet floats and soars as Horn sings and plays piano. The track is especially poignant, as it was one of Davis' last appearances ...
| | Paul McCartney Mccartney 2 CD (1980) Bonus Tracks
Sympathy For The Devil songs
$10.49 McCARTNEY II, like it's titular predecessor a decade earlier, is all Paul. He handles all the instruments and vocals here, and even produced and engineered the album himself. That's pretty much where the comparison ends, though. While many of the cuts do have a light-hearted feel a la McCARTNEY, this is a much more song-oriented album, and is an unjustly overlooked entry in the McCartney catalogue.
The hit "Coming Up" is McCartney at his most infectious and ebullient. "Temporary Secretary" is a humorous, very British-sounding tune that bears more than a little resemblance to the work of McCartney's former band (no, not Wings). McCartney gets to show off some bluesy guitar chops on the ...
| | ! Lab Remix Series, Vol. 2 CD (2004)
Sympathy For The Devil album
$8.35 It is not too strange to see the indie disco-punk bands Out Hud and !!! teamed up on an EP, considering the fact that they share many members. That the EP is made up of songs weaker than anything either band has previously released is also not really a surprise. Out Hud contribute three mixes of "JGNE," the first a rather straightforward disco punk cabinet-shaker with a naggingly insistent melody. "JGNDG" is basically the same only with a fuzzier, ...
| | Klement Julienne Panamerican CD (2004)
Sympathy For The Devil CD music
$13.39 Klement Julienne certainly have an air-travel fetish. Naming their group after a terminal PA announcement (sampled on one of Alain Dahan's vintage sound effects records), he and fellow French producer Joseph Guigui continue their quest for the ultimate in aural first-class service, naming their first full-length after the iconic Pan American airlines. Pan Am may have been the company that invented the jet-setting lifestyle by offering the very commercial, first trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific flights in history, but there is hardly anything groundbreaking about this CD. This pair strictly traffic in retro-Latin jazz and Bossa-pop, which means that the reggae-tinged "Jerko," with vocalist Stanley Beckford, is perfect music for lounging in your tree swing, preferably at South Beach, Miami's Nikki Beach Club, but your Chicago backyard on a sunny day would be fine, too. Unlike most retro-swing acts, Klement Julienne aren't afraid of the real stuff, opening "Pour ...
| | Rod Stewart Stardust: The Great American Songbook V.3 CD (2004)
Sympathy For The Devil music CDs
$11.19 Rod Stewart has gathered guest such as Stevie Wonder, Bette Midler, Dolly Parton, Eric Clapton and Dave Grusin for the third instalment of "The Great American Songbook". This Australian version includes the bonus track "A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square".
Australian edition features one bonus track: "A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square."
Neither Rod ...
| | Saint Beast-Koinjojishi Tenshitan CD (2007) (Import) Original Soundtrack
$47.29 | | Ryan Adams Cold Roses CD (2005) (Import)
Sympathy For The Devil songs
$14.45
| | Wonder Years Get Stoked On It CD (2007)
Sympathy For The Devil album
$14.05
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