| | John Denver Country Roads: Best CD - Import John Denver Discography of CDs
Also available separately as COUNTRY ROADS on Delta (46003) and ROCKY MOUNTIAN HIGH on DELTA (46004).
Retrospective of the late country/ folk singer/ songwriter's best, all digitally remastered. Part of Sony's Zound series, it also contains a biography on Denver. 20 tracks, including 'Leaving On A Jet Plane', 'Take Me Home Country Roads', 'Annie's Song', 'Sunshine On My Shoulders' & 'Rocky Mountainigh'. 1999 release. Country Roads: Best Music Country Roads: Best Review
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Buy Country Roads: Best CD Purchase Country Roads: Best CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Best Of John Denver CD (1998) (Import)
Country Roads: Best
$7.35
| | Very Best Of John Denver CD (2000)
Country Roads: Best
$9.09
| | John Denver Unplugged Collection CD (2000) (Import) Australia; United Kingdom
Country Roads: Best
$10.49
| | John Denver Christmas In Concert CD (2001)
Country Roads: Best
$6.09
| | Take Me Home: The John Denver Story DVD (1989) Special Edition
Country Roads: Best
$9.59
| | John Denver Definitive All-Time Greatest Hits CDs (2004) Bonus CD
Country Roads: Best
$9.69 The title of this collection by the Jesus of 1970s soft pop makes no bones about its intentions. Fortunately, it delivers what it promises in spades. DEFINITIVE ALL-TIME ...
| | New Grass Revival On The Boulevard CD (1984)
Country Roads: Best
$15.05
| | Claw Hammer Pablum CD (1993)
Country Roads: Best
$10.69 On Pablum, Claw Hammer once again put hard rock and blues through the punk wringer. In comparison with 1992's Ramwhale, the songs are perhaps more concise and the album more cohesive as a whole, but that's not to say that things have been toned down for this release. On the contrary, although Pablum displays a more focused approach, it's infused with a greater measure of explosive energy than its predecessor. From the outset, as the band crashes unceremoniously into the frantic, staccato charge of "Vigil Smile," Pablum has a feel of managed mayhem. This is a band seemingly operating on the brink of sonic anarchy at all times. Indeed, that precarious balance between chaos and relative order is one of the most compelling features of Claw Hammer's sound. Throughout Pablum, the group achieves that balance with a combination of signature elements: Jon Wahl's verge-of-a-nervous-breakdown vocals, a guitar assault that often puts songs ...
| | Flatlanders Now Again CD (2002)
Country Roads: Best
$13.65 Even by the most lackadaisical release schedule, three decades is a bit of a wait between a group's first and second albums. Of course, this pause in the discography of progressive-country cult heroes the Flatlanders can be explained by the fact that each of the three members spent the time in the middle becoming respected solo singer-songwriters. Still, it sounds like no time passed at all between the posthumously released MORE A LEGEND THAN A BAND and the reunited bliss of NOW AGAIN, as the reunited band's mix of traditional country, Townes Van Zandt-like troubadourism, and cowboy mysticism remains unquestionably ...
| | Pink Ribbon Gun Untitled CD (2005) (Import) Japan
$23.65 | | Patsy Cline Walking And Dreaming CD (2005)
Country Roads: Best
$10.75
| | Arthur H Negresse Blanche CD (2003) (Import) France
Country Roads: Best
$18.39
| | Moonspank You Thought The World Was Over CD (2009)
Country Roads: Best
$12.65 MOONSPANK's world is getting a whole lot bigger. So prepare to be swept away by the force of nature that is the band's latest album, You Thought the World Was Over.There is simply no evading a sound so big, so breathtaking that it breaks down defenses and stirs the soul. Once the hot, planet-swallowing pop on You Thought the World Was Over sinks its teeth into you, you'll find yourself becoming one of the growing number of Moonspank converts.Moonspank’s new album reflects not only the band’s youth, but also its rich history. The band was formed in 2002 by Dave Kerry, Tony Pax and Greg Saracino. Kerry, fresh off the boat from Ireland at the time, was in search of “the Dream” and tending bar at a local watering hole in Westchester, New York, where he met Westchester denizens Saracino and Pax.Saracino recalls, “Dave swept us off his feet with that larger than life voice of his at some open mic. That brogue didn’t hurt either! Meeting him was pure fate.”This year marks a renaissance for the band, after constant touring, they went back in the studio and recorded You Thought the World Was Over. “We’ve always drawn from our varied background and experiences while writing songs.” Kerry says. “These songs are our best.”And Kerry is right. The songwriting is second to none, and the production is beautifully colored with crystalline vocals, aggressive and tasteful percussion that rivals Stewart Copeland and Steve Gadd, deep bass tones that shake the room during huge emotional moments, vintage pianos and precise ...
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