| | Voyager CD Mike Oldfield Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Voyager Songs | 1. | The Song Of The Sun |
| 2. | Celtic Rain |
| 3. | The Hero |
| 4. | Women Of Ireland |
| 5. | The Voyager |
| 6. | She Moves Through The Fair |
| 7. | Dark Island |
| 8. | Wild Goose Flaps Its Wings |
| 9. | Flowers Of The Forest |
| 10. | Mont St. Michel |
| Purchase Voyager CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Mike Oldfield Earth Moving CD (1989)
Voyager album
$11.65 Earth Moving was one of the last installments in Mike Oldfield's series of pop experiments, and the record does sound as if the musician was running out of patience with the genre. Many listeners have written off this period, but there were interesting moments that passionate fans still appreciate. Oldfield commits completely to the pop/rock format on Earth Moving by excluding the kind of long intro piece that he often used to kick off other '80s recordings. Instead, the composer puts a sprawling but focused (by Oldfield standards) eight-minute number, "Nothing But/Bridge to Paradise," at the end of this 1989 release. The musician/composer displays a more deft pop hand throughout this offering, which probably isn't such a good thing. The quirkiness of discs like Crisis is exactly what makes them interesting. Unfortunately, songs like "Hostage" are so conventional, they sound unimaginative: almost -- no, exactly -- like bad '80s soundtrack numbers. Not just casual fans, but even Oldfield loyalists will have trouble with Earth Moving, one of the artist's lesser albums. ~ Vincent Jeffries
Mid-priced U.K. reissue of 1989 album featuring Adrian Belew(King Crimson) singing lead vocals on 'Holy' & Chris Thompson (Manfred Mann's Earth Band) singing ...
| | David Bowie Best Of Bowie CDs (2002) Bonus CD; Remastered; 2 CDS
Voyager CD music
$19.49 This edition of BEST OF BOWIE will only be available 12.2.2003-3.31.2004.
Ably serving as a substitute for the excellent but out-of-print collection BOWIE: THE SINGLES 1969-1993, the two-CD BEST OF BOWIE serves as an outstanding career-spanning retrospective featuring material from as recent as 2002. Above all reflecting the visionary aptitude of a restless creative genius who switched into different musical guises the way some people change suits, these 38 cuts trace David Bowie's path from space-rock folkie ("Space Oddity") and glam god ("Ziggy Stardust") to blue-eyed soulster ("Young Americans"), and cutting-edge futurist ("Fashion").
21st-century kids might be aware of Bowie via covers by Nirvana ("The Man Who Sold The World") or the Wallflowers ("Heroes"), but it's equally likely they've heard playlist war-horses like '80s alt-pop classics "Let's Dance," "Modern Love," and "China Girl." Not to be missed are this icon's stellar collaborations with a wide range of talent including John Lennon ("Fame"), Queen ("Under Pressure"), Mick Jagger ("Dancing In The Streets"), and The Pat Metheny Group ("This Is Not America"). The latter material rounding out this collection is equally deserving of attention whether it's the howling nihilism of Bowie's group Tin Machine ("Under The God"), a Nine Inch Nails industrial-rock team-up ("I'm Afraid Of Americans [V1]"), or the 2002 reunion with '70s collaborator Tony Visconti ("Slow Burn").
Although ...
| | King Crimson In The Court Of The Crimson King: Original Master Edition CD (1969) (Import)
Voyager music CDs
$14.59 Initial pressings featured a limited edition, cardboard-stock gatefold sleeve and unpublished archive photos.
KC's debut album introduced to the world a group that threw various '60s genres into a blender and set the results afire with a blowtorch. One of the pioneers of the progressive rock movement that began in the late '60s and flourished in the early '70s, King Crimson was arguably the most consistently creative band in the genre. On IN THE COURT they blend wispy, Donovan-ish folk-rock with Wagnerian grandeur, mind-bending heavy rock, and even a free- jazz sensibility. Greg Lake's vocals are effectively theatrical but more restrained than in his later ELP work. Robert Fripp was just learning how to make mincemeat of a chord progression, but he's alternately lyrical and frenetic as the moment requires.
The extended jams on cuts like "Moonchild" are light-footed and inventive, never ponderous, thanks largely to the crisp, jazzy drumming of Michael Giles. "20th Century Schizoid Man"'s bone-crushing ensemble riffs and crazed solos were of a heft unprecedented in rock & roll. Most importantly, the trademark Crimson would stick to throughout their career is shown here--dynamic variations between soft/lyrical and raucous/experimental. This was seen not just between songs but in the drastic dynamic shifts between ...
| | Jethro Tull Broadsword & The Beast CD (1982) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Voyager songs
$8.05 In the '80s, Jethro Tull was no longer the dominant force on the rock scene they had been throughout much of the previous decade, but the indomitable Ian Anderson continued to make ambitious records based on themes of ages past, even in an era of skinny ties and drum machines. BROADSWORD AND THE BEAST has a marked swords-and-sorcery motif; Anderson is depicted as a winged elfin creature on the cover. Despite such leanings, producer Paul Samwell-Smith--original bassist for the Yardbirds--gives the record a modern gloss, weaving the synthesizer playing of Peter-John Vettesse and the out-sized guitars of Tull stalwart Martin Barre through BROADSWORD's vaguely medieval-sounding romps.
The record is divided into two sides, Beastie and Broadsword. On the songs named for each side, Anderson evokes the spirit of swordplay and dragons, but elsewhere, on songs such "Fallen on Hard Times" he sings of more modern concerns. "Pussy Willow" is perhaps the best distillation of the classic Tull formula, juxtaposing Anderson's gruff but expressive vocals and a strong, insistent melody bolstered by well-placed, crunchy guitar chords.
Jethro Tull appears to have had something like an embarrassment of riches when it came to assembling The Broadsword and the Beast ...
| | XBox 360 Live Points - 1600 XBox 360 Microsoft
Voyager album
$19.74
| | XBox 360 Live Points - 4000 XBox 360
Voyager CD music
$48.95
| | Evanescence Anywhere But Home CD (2004) Japan
Voyager music CDs
$50.29 In 2003, Evanescence scored a surprise hit with FALLEN by combining an intensely heavy, nu-metal sound with old-school goth visual/lyrical elements, and the quasi-operatic vocals of lead singer Amy Lee. The CD/DVD set ANYWHERE BUT HOME documents the band's non-stop touring schedule with in-concert takes on ...
| | Gran Turismo 4 CD (2004) (Import)
Voyager songs
$38.85 Japan exclusive soundtrack. 2004.
| | Harrison Featuring Roma W Disco Stewie I Need You (2006) (Import)
Voyager album
$5.89
| | Divas At Christmas CD (2007) (Import)
Voyager CD music
$9.19
| | Perfect Moments:Klassisch CD (Import)
Voyager music CDs
$35.49
| | XXL 12.O Richter CD (2007) (Import)
Voyager songs
$18.39
| | James Tipper Cries From The Ragged Lands CD (2007)
Voyager album
$12.65 Singer/songwriter James Tipper is back with a scorching disc of new tunes inspired by Los Angeles and the Hollywood scene. As Jack Kerouac once called L.A., the “Ragged Lands” have inspired this musical auteur to new heights of lyrical and melodic intensity. From the pulse pounding “Accelerate” to the techno-fueled cautionary tale of “Starry Eyed” and the space-rock majesty ...
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