| | Barbara, Vol. 2 CD Barbara Discography of CDs
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Universal. Barbara, Vol. 2 Review
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Purchase Barbara, Vol. 2 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Dion Bronx In Blue CD (2005)
Barbara, Vol. 2 album
$15.65
| | Moody Blues In Search Of The Lost Chord CD (1968) Bonus Tracks; Reissue
Barbara, Vol. 2 CD music
$11.99 After helping lay the groundwork for concept albums and progressive rock with 1967's orchestra-enhanced suite DAYS OF FUTURE PASSED, the Moodies retrenched for the follow-up. They abandoned the orchestra but kept their sound as rich as before by playing a multitude of instruments themselves, including everything from sitar to cello to oboe. At the time, it was remarkable enough for these instruments to appear on a rock record, much less to be played by the band itself. The string-laden conceptual pieces of DAYS were replaced by shorter, more concise songs that leaned more toward Beatlesque pop and displayed a pronounced Eastern influence.
Graham Edge's short spoken-word ...
| | Azam Ali Portals Of Grace CD (2002)
Barbara, Vol. 2 music CDs
$11.69 Having made her name as the ethereal vocalist of Vas, Azam Ali ventures forth with this shimmering solo debut. Openly influenced by Hildegard von Bingen, PORTALS OF GRACE continues Ali's long ...
| | Celtic Woman Greatest Journey: Essential Collection CD (2008) Bonus Tracks
Barbara, Vol. 2 songs
$15.65 Celtic Woman, initially a one-shot collaboration by six leading Irish vocalists for a 2004 PBS special, struck a chord of adoration for the Emerald Isle, a fancy affecting both sides of the Atlantic, and swiftly became a permanent collective. THE GREATEST JOURNEY captures many of the best moments of elegant harmonizing by the act, from their serene and rapturous ...
| | Dead Can Dance/Garden Of The Arcane Delight CD (1984) Reissue; Special Edition; Extended Play
Barbara, Vol. 2 album
$11.99 On the evidence of this, the band's first record, Dead Can Dance can clearly be seen as a "Goth" group in the vein of Bauhaus, et al. The ...
| | Victor Jara Antologia Musical CD (2003) Remastered; Remastered Edition
Barbara, Vol. 2 CD music
$20.95 ANTOLOGIA MUSICAL collects the best-loved tracks from legendary Chilean folk artist and political prisoner ...
| | Cuarteto Caney With Machito 1939 - 1940 CD (Import)
Barbara, Vol. 2 music CDs
$19.05
| | Walter Wanderley Batucada CD (1967) Japan
Barbara, Vol. 2 songs
$28.29
| | Tuna Estudiantina De Cayey 15 Exitos Navidenos CD (2005)
Barbara, Vol. 2 album
$7.85
| | Yoshinagasanchino Gargoyle Drama CD CD (2006) (Import)
$49.95 | | Francois Feldman CD Story CD (2006) Import
Barbara, Vol. 2 CD music
$49.89
| | Johnny Hallyday CD (1969) (Import)
Barbara, Vol. 2 music CDs
$15.75 Johnny Hallyday's self-titled 1969 album was not one of his more typical releases, going into heavier British-influenced rock (though all the songs are sung in French) than the poppier rock & roll for which he's more widely known. It could be, however, the Hallyday album most likely to interest non-French listeners, if only for a strong if unlikely connection to a famous British rock band. The Small Faces -- then on the verge of breaking up -- backed him up for three of the tracks, all recorded at a January 3, 1969 session. These included a French-language cover of the group's "That Man," plus two songs by Small Faces members Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane, "What You Will" (later cut by Humble Pie for their first album) and "News Report," never done by the Small Faces on their own records. What's more, all but one of the other songs were penned by Mick Jones (the same Mick Jones who'd go on to Spooky Tooth and Foreigner) and Tommy Brown, who also did arrangements and played on the album. So after all that, how's the music? Well, it does sound a little like cookie-cutter early British guitar-organ hard rock with a somewhat overwrought French singer. Not that it bothered Hallyday's following, with the album going to number one in France and yielding a hit single there, "Riviere...Ouvre Ton Lit," that became a staple of his live sets ever since. Nonetheless, Hallyday himself said in his autobiography ...
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