| | Kid Creole Best Of CD - Import Kid Creole Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $14.45 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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This15-track compilation presents some of the wackiest tunes by the rambunctious showman Kid Creole and his Coconuts, including "I'm a Wonderful Thing, Baby" and "Don't Take My Coconuts."
Excellent selection from the Island/Ze/Sire years with all the hits and much more, including "Annie, I'm Not Your Daddy", "Stool Pigeon", "There's Something Wrong In Paradise" and the wry "Dear Addy". Kid Creole Best Of Songs | 1. | Lifeboat Party |
| 2. | Stool Pigeon |
| 3. | Gina Gina |
| 4. | Annie, I'm Not Your Daddy |
| 5. | Me No Pop I |
| 6. | Latin Music |
| 7. | Off the Coast of Me |
| 8. | I'm a Wonderful Thing, Baby |
| 9. | Don't Take My Coconuts |
| 10. | Imitation |
| 11. | Maladie d'Amour |
| 12. | Dear Addy |
| 13. | There's Something Wrong in Paradise |
| 14. | Back in the Field Again |
| 15. | I'm a Wonderful Thing Baby (12" Version) |
| Best Of Review
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Purchase Best Of CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | The Ultimate Bee Gees CDs (2009)
Best Of
$15.24 Functioning as something of a replacement for the 2001 collection Their Greatest Hits: The Record, The Ultimate Bee Gees covers much of the same ground as that double-disc set, albeit in not quite so linear a fashion. The Record marched through its 40 tracks chronologically, opening with the stately baroque Beatlesque pop of the '60s and then winding through the '70s, whereas this opens with the bright, fabulous blast of "You Should Be Dancing" and remains in their late-'70s heyday ...
| | Isaac Hayes Shaft (Deluxe Edition) CD (1971) Bonus Track; Remastered; Deluxe Edition
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$9.58 Despite its codification into our collective pop culture consciousness, Isaac Hayes' "Theme From Shaft" is a highly original composition. It's been remade by Hayes himself for the remade Shaft film, and appropriately kicks off this collection of tunes from the movie by some of R&B's New Jacks.
A diverse selection of artists encompass the collection, from lascivious soul stirrer R. Kelly to the rugged Latin hip-hop of Fulanito, along with many other noteworthy diversions that represent the many flavors of contemporary urban soul. Most of the material focuses on John Shaft's street smarts and bravado, or the film's pimps, hoes, and gangsta imagery. As expected, Southern hip-hop ...
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| | Alanis Morissette Jagged Little Pill CD (1995)
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$12.29 JAGGED LITTLE PILL won the 1996 Grammy Awards for Album Of The Year and Best Rock Album. "You Oughta Know" won the Grammys for Best Rock Song and Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. "You Oughta Know" was also nominated for Song Of The Year, and Alanis Morissette was nominated for Best New Artist.
"Ironic" was nominated for the 1997 Grammy Award for Record Of The Year.
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Recalling Siouxsie Sioux and Sinead O'Connor, Morissette's vocals coo and writhe, exuding a spectacular confidence of self, and letting her get away with lines like "I recommend biting off more than you can chew." The audio palette of flamenco guitar fills, distortion-drenched power chords and house-ready drum beats allow for Morissette to weave her songs in and out of genres, as easily as she goes through moods. Seemingly contradictory emotions come through in her feelings on falling in love on "Head Over Feet" ("You've already won me over in spite of ...
| | Bob Childers Nothin' More Natural CD (1997)
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$9.25 Recorded at Cimarron Sound Lab, Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Personnel: Bob Childers (vocals, guitar); John Cooper, Bradley Piccolo (vocals, percussion); Scootie Lester, Scott Evans, Monica Taylor, Scotte Lester, Mike McClure (vocals); Jeff Parker (guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, slide guitar, gut-string guitar, percussion); Jesse Childers ...
| | Express Yourself: Best Of Soul CD (2002)
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$7.69 Twelve songs are not near enough to represent the best of soul music, but this collection does a decent job. Most of the tracks are drawn from the Atlantic and Stax archives and include stomping tracks like Sam & Dave's ""Soul Man" and the wicked Wilson ...
| | Soul Position 8 Million Stories CD (2003)
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$13.09 Although Columbus, Ohio's Soul Position had released a five-song EP the previous year, 2003's 8 Million Stories is the group's first full-length record, and is definitely a strong debut. Blueprint's songs all tell stories of people and the situations they might find themselves in. The events can be humorous (as in "The Jerry Springer Episode"), critical ("Look of Pain," "F*ckajob"), or just explanatory ("Run," "Right Place, Wrong Time"), but they're always very detailed and good at capturing listeners' attention. Yes, Blueprint can be overly dramatic (almost all of his serious tales end in death or destruction of some sort), but this can be excused by the fact that he is very sincerely trying to point out and comment on problems in American society. And anyway, he lightens the mood of the record by inserting more playful songs between the heavier ones, like the three-part "Candyland," in which he reminisces on growing up in the '80s, alphabetically listing toys and TV shows (how many hip-hop albums reference popples?) in "Part 1," high school activities (that's a loose definition, as both "Coca-Cola jackets" and "feeling girls' booties" are included) in "Part 2," and types of candy in "Part 3," all over a lush beat. And it's no mistaking that RJD2's the one making the music for Soul Position. 8 Million Stories sounds like it was taken right from the Dead Ringer sessions, complete with descending, melancholic guitar and piano lines, and funk-inspired rhythms. This all goes well with Blueprint's delivery, which incorporates a cadenced, almost spoken word style that RJD2 works to highlight with his use of both melodic instrumentation and silence. It's a successful combination, with very few things that fall short ("Run" may be the sole example of a song that doesn't quite make it, with an overuse of the title word that just becomes boring, even though the subject matter -- escape, avoidance, and fear -- is fairly provocative and interesting). 8 Million Stories is quite promising, and definitely puts Soul Position on track to be another great producer/MC combination. ~ Marisa Brown
As is the case with many albums by hip-hop groups in which the producer is a respected force, an instrumental version follows shortly after. So of course it makes perfect sense that Soul Position's 2003 record, 8 Million Stories, had a companion in the form of 8 Million Stories: Instrumentals, which is, being that "instrumentals" in this case equal RJD2, also pretty much a companion ...
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