| | Pastor Lopez 16 Exitos Vol. 1 CD Pastor Lopez Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
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Our Price: $7.49 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $10.89
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Pastor Lopez 16 Exitos Vol. 1 Songs 16 Exitos Vol. 1 Music Review Purchase 16 Exitos Vol. 1 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Pastor Lopez 30 Pegaditas De Oro, Vol. 2 CD (1999)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 album
$7.49
| | Pastor Lopez 16 Exitos Vol. 2 CD (1995)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 CD music
$7.49 Liner Note Author: Ofelia Pelaez.
| | Victor Manuelle Le Preguntaba A La Luna CD (2002)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 music CDs
$9.09 LE PREGUNTABA A LA LUNA was nominated for the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Salsa/Merengue Album.
By the time of ...
| | Gilberto Santa Rosa El Caballero De La Salsa CD (2009)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 songs
$10.09
| | Tito Rodriguez Canciones De Amor CD (2007) Remastered
16 Exitos Vol. 1 album
$7.69 Audio Remasterer: Juan Cristobal Losada.
| | Gilberto Santa Rosa Contrastes CDs (2007)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 CD music
$11.29
| | Wanna Buy A Craprak? CD (2003)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 music CDs
$8.19
| | 6T'S Rhythm & Soul Society - In The Beginning CD (2005) (Import) United Kingdom
16 Exitos Vol. 1 songs
$16.89 Vintage soul music has long had a more welcome home in the United Kingdom than in the United States, where collectors and rabid fans have built a cottage industry out of trading and reissuing vintage R&B sides both famous and ridiculously obscure. Ady Croasdell and Randy Cozens are two British soul mavens who launched a "Rhythm 'n' Soul" club night in London in 1979, which has been continuing in one form or another ever since. Designed to replicate the mod-era dance nights that featured a wide variety of dance-friendly R&B sounds rather than just the Northern soul material that dominated the U.K. R&B scene, the club night's popularity led to Croasdell compiling a series of soul anthologies for the British Kent label, and with this set he goes back to the club dances that helped inspire it all. Croasdell's 20-page liner essay on the history of the 6T's Rhythm 'n' Soul Society will be tough going for most American readers (and more than a few in the U.K.), since it deals more with rivalries between different packs of soul fans, club licensing laws, and the layouts of the various venues that hosted his dates than the actual music, but the 25 great tunes on the CD testify that the man knows his stuff. Running the gamut from the cool sounds of Brenda Holloway's "When I'm Gone" to the frantic New Orleans beat of "Don't You Just Know It" by Huey "Piano" Smith, from Etta James' mid-'50s take on "The Wallflower (Roll with Me Henry)" to a handful of 1966 classics, from the jazz-flavored groove of "Yeh, Yeh!" from Mongo Santamaria to the woeful blue mood of Chuck Jackson's "Two Stupid Feet" and stopping at plenty of places in between, this is a great party disc for R&B connoisseurs, and ideal for either listening or grooving. No wonder this guy's club night has been running so long -- this guy and his pals know a great record when they hear one, and they've ...
| | Ringo Starr Choose Love CD (2005) DualDisc
16 Exitos Vol. 1 album
$15.69 DVD side of this release includes exclusive interviews, recording session footage, discography and Ringo original artwork gallery.
This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other.
Unlike much of Ringo Starr's previous solo work, CHOOSE LOVE eschews the all-star approach that dominated the ...
| | Diamond Rio Unbelievable CD (1998)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 CD music
$6.05
| | Kevin House Silverio/In The Heat Of The Night CDs (2007)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 music CDs
$14.05
| | Ustad Nishat Khan Heart Of Fire CD (2007) (Import) United Kingdom
16 Exitos Vol. 1 songs
$17.45
| | Vision Through Sound History Of The Damnable Life & Deserved Death Of V CD (2008)
16 Exitos Vol. 1 album
$10.15 (08/2008) VISION THROUGH SOUND RELEASES HIGHLY-ANTICIPATED FIFTH LP, The History of the Damnable Life and Deserved Death of Vision Through SoundBy Liz PellyThe members of Vision Through Sound are an intelligent bunch of freaks, which they prove on their most recent efforts, The History of the Damnable Life and Deserved Death of Vision Through Sound. Just take a look at the album’s title and artwork. (Is that an evil cat lowering down a noose to two cute kittens? Yes.) Freaky vocals, group chants, screams that might be cries for help, and female harmonies wrap around some of the most thought-provoking and mindful lyrics that songwriters Andrew Krolikowski and Franny Berkman have ever written: “Po-Tee-Weet?” is the band’s heaviest, angriest song to date, drenched in political bits that comment on society at large; the zombies and magic tricks that surface in “Abra” meditate on the meaning of decrepit romantic relationships; meanwhile, all tracks are soaked in the dark evidence that these guys have spent a lot of time in their heads, at the library, reading a whole lot of Vonnegut. But the album is a far throw from a downer: Krolikowski’s uplifting, trademark vocals return and take center stage, peeking in and out of Fran Berkman and Mike McManus’s melodic, memorable guitar riffs and bass lines (part psychedelic/dance/funk, part Nirvana/Pixies/Pumpkins) that seem to sometimes fight for the spotlight, all while the ...
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