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They may have been brought back to life by an automobile ad on TV, but stranger things have happened in the pop world. If you were clubbing or listening to rock radio in the early '80s, you probably remember the first time you heard "Da Da Da (I Don't Love You You Don't Love Me Aha Aha Aha)." It's a simple but strangely addictive song; three guitar chords, a junky Casio keyboard, and that's it. The other songs here are much the same brand of Dadaistic, ultra-primitive techno-pop. "Boom Boom" follows the formula, a few well-chosen chords and some deadpan vocalizing. No one was ever sure if Trio was making an artistic statement with their minimalist approach, or if they just didn't know any other chords, but hey, who cares. It's great driving music!
Compilation Of Their Greatest Hits Released On Spectrum Label.
Digitally remastered by Fred Meyer.
German edition
Compilation producer: Bill Levenson, Bas Hartong.
Trio: Stephan Remmler, Kralle Krawinkel, Peter Behrens.
Producer: Klaus Voorman.
Trio Da Da Da Songs | 1. | Da da Da | |
| 2. | Anna | |
| 3. | Herz Ist Trumpf Dann Rufs | |
| 4. | Energie | |
| 5. | Los Paul | |
| 6. | Sunday You Need Love Mond | |
| 7. | Turaluraluralu | |
| 8. | Kummer | |
| 9. | My Sweet Angel | |
| 10. | Nasty | |
| 11. | Nur Ein Traum | |
| 12. | Hur Ein Traum | |
| 13. | Broken Hearts For You And | |
| 14. | Achtung Achtung | |
| Da Da Da Review
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Purchase Da Da Da CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Pink Can't Take Me Home CD (2000)
Da Da Da album
$8.99 No rookie in the music business, Pink had already had careers both as a dancer and background singer before forming a group of her own. Packed with cutting-edge R&B and pop, her debut album boasts seven songs co-written by this appealing and talented young woman.
On CAN'T TAKE ME HOME, Pink pulls out all the stops, ...
| | Shai If I Ever Fall In Love CD (1992)
Da Da Da CD music
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| | Lionel Richie Encore CD (2004) (Import) Bonus Tracks; United Kingdom
Da Da Da music CDs
$11.99 This collection of live material from U.S. pop music artist Lionel Richie includes such popular songs as "Brick House" and "Dancing On The Ceiling."
Two years after its release outside the U.S. and five months after the appearance of Lionel Richie's modestly selling seventh studio album, ...
| | Diana Ross To Love Again CD (1981) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Da Da Da songs
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| | Yanni Ethnicity CD (2003)
Da Da Da album
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| | Los Bukis 16 Kilates Musicales CD (1994)
Da Da Da CD music
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| | Manhattans Greatest Hits CD (1980)
Da Da Da music CDs
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| | Les Innocents 100 Metres Au Paradis CD (2004) (Import) France
Da Da Da songs
$13.15 EMI. 2004.
| | Jeff Kelly Indiscretion CD (2001)
Da Da Da album
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| | Big Country Greatest 12 Inch Hits V.1 CD (2001) (Import) Import; Netherlands
Da Da Da CD music
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| | Mayhem Legions Of War CDs (2003)
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| | Nineties Box Set CDs (2002) (Import) Import; United Kingdom
Da Da Da songs
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| | Hiding/Albert Lee CD (2004)
Da Da Da album
$19.55 This reissue is both welcome and irritating. The welcome part is that this brilliant music, by one of those more ubiquitous if under-recognized session guitarists of the 1970s and 1980s, is finally available in a remastered edition on CD, thanks to Australia's Raven label. Albert Lee's A&M session Hiding was recorded in two different stages. The first was with Lee playing virtually everything but bass and drums with old friends Dave Peacock and Chas Hodges. The second and definitive stage was when he became a touring member of Emmylou Harris' Hot Band, enlisting her then-husband, Brian Ahern, and the entire band (which included Ricky Skaggs, Hank DeVito, Emory Gordy, Rodney Crowell, and Glen D. Hardin) with session cats like Buddy Emmons and Mickey Raphael. The standard issue from Hiding was the tune "Country Boy," which has been covered by a dozen artists since. The sound of the record was close to the bone, full of fiddles, acoustic guitars, mandolins, funky bass and piano lines, and Lee's trademark electric blistering licks. Covers of the Louvins' "Are You Wasting My Time," John Reid's "Now and Then It's Gonna Rain," and three Crowell tunes -- including "Ain't Living Long Like This" -- rounded out the album. While Lee's singing leaves a bit to be desired here, it doesn't detract, either. But the masterpiece in this set is Lee's self-titled album from 1982. Producer Crowell, who was riding high with productions for Harris, his then-wife Rosanne Cash, and his own album, put together a band and helped Lee choose ten smoking tracks that showcased his abilities not only as a guitarist but as a frontman. The album opens with DeVito's pub rocker "Sweet Little Lisa" (this version is second only to Dave Edmunds' read of it) and slides right into John Hiatt's "Radio Girl" -- a version even better than the original. Lee contributed the slippery cruiser "Your Boys," and Crowell gave him another pair of tunes to balance the equation with one more each by Hiatt and DeVito. The songs serve to offer a more rock & roll side of Lee. His first love may have been country, but Crowell heard in him what he heard in Nick Lowe and Edmunds, a British rocker whose love for American roots music translated into something entirely new. There isn't a substandard second on the latter album and it continues to be the high point in Lee's catalog as a solo artist. As for the irritating element of this release: why does it take a non-American label to reissue the finest gems from the North American labels that birthed them? Given that both of these records appeared on labels now owned by Universal, there is no ...
| | Up In Central Park/Arms And The Girl CD (2004)
Da Da Da CD music
$13.95 Origingal Broadway cast includes: Wilbur Evans, Eileen Farrell, Betty Bruce, Celeste Holm.
Recorded on March 9, 1945, New York, New York. Originally released on DA (395)-(78 RPM) and on DL (8016).
Original Broadway cast includes: Nanette Fabray, Georges Guetary, Pearl Bailey.
Recorded on February 27, 1950 in New York, New York. Originally released on DA-(759)-(78RPM) and on DL-(5200).
This CD combines two Broadway musicals, 1945's Up in Central Park and 1950s Arms and the Girl, that were recorded in abbreviated form because of the format restrictions of the day (i.e., 78s and 10" LPs), so that, together, they still run only 49 minutes. The common element in the pairing is lyricist Dorothy Fields (who also co-wrote the shows' libretti); she teamed with composer Sigmund Romberg for Up in Central Park and with Morton Gould for Arms and the Girl. Although it is considered an original Broadway cast album, Up in Central Park actually features only Wilbur Evans and Betty Bruce from the cast. Missing is female lead Maureen Cannon, most of whose songs are handled by Eileen Farrell, with the lively "The Fireman's Bride" sung by the lively Celeste Holm (fresh from her performance as Ado Annie in Oklahoma!). A more serious reservation concerns the recording's length, only eight songs (though that ...
| | David Johansen Here Comes The Night CD (1979) Reissue
Da Da Da music CDs
$10.75 David Johansen's first solo album was a triumph, a savvy blend of the New York Dolls' swagger and a more conventional but no less idiosyncratic hard rock style that left plenty of room for Johansen's eclectic musical outlook. Unfortunately, it didn't sell, and for his second post-Dolls release Johansen and producer Mick Ronson aimed for something with a bit more polish and a better chance of getting onto the ...
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