| | Angelo Debarre Caprice CD - Import Angelo Debarre Discography of CDs
Contains 10 tracks.
Personnel: Angelo Debarre (acoustic guitar); Florin Nicolescu (violin); Bojan Z. (piano); Xavier Desandre (percussion).
Liner Note Author: Pascal de Loutchek.
Recording information: Sysmo Studio, Paris, France.
Arranger: Angelo Debarre. Angelo Debarre Caprice Songs | 1. | Angelo's Caprice |
| 2. | Avalon |
| 3. | Inquietude |
| 4. | Double Bar |
| 5. | Vieux Tzigane, Le |
| 6. | Carmenctia |
| 7. | MW |
| 8. | Anouman |
| 9. | Just Avant |
| 10. | Nuages |
| 11. | Appel Indirect |
| 12. | Angelo's Caprice |
| Caprice Review
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Purchase Caprice CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Monster Ballads CD (1999)
Caprice album
$15.65 Razor & Tie's Monster Ballads provides a near-definitive portrait of the golden age of the power ballad, the late '80s/early '90s (henceforth known as the Bush era). Sure, a few of the 16 songs were recorded prior to the Bush era (such as Mike Reno and Anne Wilson's genre-defining "Almost Paradise" or Europe's "Carrie"), and there are a few noticeable omissions (no Bon Jovi or Slaughter, "Something to Believe In" instead of the classic "Every Rose Has Its Thorn" from Poison), but it's hard to argue with almost everything here. Nearly every classic power ballad is here -- "Heaven," "High Enough," "Is This Love," "To Be With You," "Don't Know What You Got ...
| | Richard Pryor Anthology (1968-1992) CDs (2002)
Caprice CD music
$10.89 Recorded between 1968 and 1992. Includes liner notes by Reggie Collins, Steve Pokorny, Walter Mosley.
Rhino's 2002 release The Anthology: 1968-1992 is essentially the highlights from their seminal 2000 box set, And It's Deep Too!, which contained the complete recordings (more or less) of Richard Pryor, the greatest comedian of his time and one of the great cultural forces of the 20th century. Since this is a clear case of recycling, it could be argued by some curmudgeons that there simply isn't a point behind this release, since it was all reissued. They're wrong, of course, since this not only does an excellent job of rounding up much of the greatest and best-known of his classic albums, but it provides a succinct, welcoming introduction to a large body of work -- something that simply couldn't be said about the lavish box set, no matter how great it is. Here, on the course of two discs (whose selections lean heavily on the breakthrough That Nigger's Crazy and Wanted/Richard Pryor Live in Concert), neophytes get a needed crash course in Pryor, not only through the great material, but with a terrific essay from Walter Mosley (originally published in the box), plus a nice introduction from Reggie Collins and Steve Pokorny that gently (and deservedly) plugs the larger set. ...
| | Due South - Season 2 DVDs (1995) Digipak
Caprice music CDs
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| | John Denver Rocky Mountain Christmas CD (1975)
Caprice songs
$6.09 This 1998 reissue contains 5 bonus tracks (including the previously
unreleased "White Christmas") not included on the original release.
John Denver's music always had a warm, home-spun quality to it, so it isn't surprising that his 1975 holiday effort, Rocky Mountain Christmas, is a wonderfully low-key and friendly Christmas album. Divided between ...
| | Andy Andrews: The Seven Decisions DVD (2005) With CD
Caprice album
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| | Open The Eyes Of My Heart CDs (2005)
Caprice CD music
$15.15
| | Les Brown Jubilee On The Air CD (1988)
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| | Peter Thomas Majolika Lounge CD (2003)
Caprice songs
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| | June Christy Ballads For Night People CD (1998) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Caprice album
$9.29 Through her decade-long tenure on Capitol Records, the singer June Christy rarely recorded a less-than-stellar session. Most of her LPs were carefully programmed, arranged, and, of course, sung. (As with a classical singer, these professional habits only enhanced Christy's artistry.) BALLADS FOR NIGHT PEOPLE from 1959 also boasts relaxed, jazzy arrangements by the singer's husband, saxophonist Bob Cooper, a fellow alumnus of Stan Kenton's band. There are two Duke Ellington classics,"Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me" and "Don't Get Around Much Anymore," a definitive version of Kurt Weill's "My Ship," and an arresting performance of Rodgers & Hart's "Bewitched (Bothered & Bewildered)" which dramatically opens the set.
The music on Ballads for Night People (not reissued on CD) features the popular singer June Christy in a ballad-oriented program. She is backed by trombonist Frank Rosolino, a French horn, a sax section, a rhythm section, and a harp, all arranged by her husband, tenor saxophonist Bob Cooper. One in a long string of Christy's Capitol recordings, this fine set (highlighted by "Bewitched," "Do Nothin' 'Till You Hear ...
| | Philippe Duchemin For Oscar CD (2005) (Import) France
Caprice CD music
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| | Billy Walker Cowboy CD (2005)
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| | Candeia Nova Serie CD (2008) (Import)
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| | Dee Dee Bridgewater Dear Ella CD (1997) Import
Caprice album
$18.99 Principally recorded at Capitol Studios, Los Angeles, California and Right Track Recording Studios, New York, New York in January & February 1997. Includes liner notes by Dee Dee Bridgewater and Claude Carriere.
DEAR ELLA won the 1998 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance. "Cotton Tail" won and "My Heart Belongs To Daddy" was nominated for the 1998 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement With Accompanying Vocal(s).
Following her critically acclaimed tribute to legendary pianist/composer Horace Silver, Dee Dee Bridgewater tackles an even more daring project for a young jazz vocalist: a tribute to the First Lady of Song, Ella Fitzgerald. With help from prominent Fitzgerald side-men and some marvelously swinging arrangements by Cecil Bridgewater, Slide Hampton, and John Clayton, Bridgewater makes DEAR ELLA both a delightful tribute to a jazz icon and a testament to her own creative talents.
Choosing a repertoire of 12 tunes indelibly associated with Ella (plus the title-track written by guitarist Kenny Burrell) Bridgewater is able to retain the excitement and vitality of the originals, yet interpret them in ways unmistakably her own. The arrangements range from overt hat-tipping toward the well-known Fitzgerald recordings--though generally with some unexpected twists--to some dramatically different interpretations. Perhaps most remarkable, though, is Bridgewater's scat singing on these tunes. Any vocalist who attempts to scat in such Fitzgerald domain as "How High The Moon" and "Oh, Lady Be Good," has some big shoes to fill. Yet Bridgewater makes her way through these tunes in top Fitzgeraldesque form--quoting bebop melodies and all--without sounding for a moment like a clone of the maestra.
Digitally remastered edition of this 1997 album from the acclaimed Jazz vocalist. Emarcy. 2009.
Personnel: Dee Dee Bridgewater (vocals); Kenny Burrell (vocals, guitar); R. Heisser Wilson, J. "Buddie" Archer, A. Noland, R. Wilson, T. Williams, Boguslaw Kostecki (violin); G. Jackson, J. Graham (viola); Peter Willison (cello); R. Taylor (flute); T.C. Kelly, R. Jowitt (clarinet); A. Wallbank (bass clarinet); R.J. Morgan (oboe); Antonio Hart (alto saxophone, horns); Jeff Clayton (alto saxophone); Teodross Avery, Bill Easley (tenor saxophone); Patience Higgins (baritone ...
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