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Our Price: $28.29 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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Japanese reissue & CD debut for British metal band's third RCA album (1985) with six hidden bonus tracks (15TRX): 1)Hold On (To Your Love) 2)My Apollo 3)Reflections 4)Keep The Fires Burning 5)The Hunter 6)Brave The Storm 7)Wild Wild Woman 8)Caught In The Act 9)Was I Wrong? (THE NEXT SIX ARE THE HIDDEN BONUS TRACKS) 10)Hold On(To Your Love) (Extended Version) 11)Strangers In Town 12)Deep Water ('Once Bitten' Mix) 13)Give Me A Chance ('Twice Shy' Mix) 14)Two Hearts (Live) 15)Behind Closed Doors (Live). Shy Brave The Storm Songs | 1. | Hold on to Your Love |
| 2. | My Apollo |
| 3. | Reflections |
| 4. | Keep the Fires Burning |
| 5. | Hunter, The |
| 6. | Brave the Storm |
| 7. | Wild Wild Woman |
| 8. | Caught in the Action |
| 9. | Was I Wrong? |
| Brave The Storm Review
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Purchase Brave The Storm CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Scott Henderson Vital Tech Tones CD (1998)
Brave The Storm album
$13.49 Who said there's no such thing as good fusion? Scott Henderson, Steve Smith and Victor Wooten have teamed up to prove the skeptics wrong with VITAL TECH TONES. There's a lot of electricity generated when these three giants get together. Yes, there are chops galore, so the weak-hearted among you might want to stay on the sidelines. For those brave enough, however, there await blazing grooves, blistering guitar and virtuoso solos that must be heard to be believed.
From the heavy opening groove of "Crash Course" it is evident this project was not meant for the Adult Contemporary Happy Jazz crowd. From buzz saw-like power chords to soaring lead runs, Henderson's guitar work is stunning. Smith's thundering solos are evidence enough why he is at the top of his field, and Wooten is the most acrobatic bassist you'll find in the ...
| | Best Of Bad Company Live: What You Hear Is What You Get CD (1993)
Brave The Storm CD music
$8.59 After releasing several albums with new vocalist Brian Howe serving as the ...
| | Monster Ballads CD (1999)
Brave The Storm music CDs
$15.65 Razor & Tie's Monster Ballads provides a near-definitive portrait of the golden age of the power ballad, the late '80s/early '90s (henceforth known as the Bush era). Sure, a few of the 16 songs were recorded prior to the Bush era (such as Mike Reno and Anne Wilson's genre-defining "Almost Paradise" or Europe's "Carrie"), and there are a few noticeable omissions (no Bon Jovi or Slaughter, "Something to Believe In" instead of the classic "Every ...
| | Prism Best Of CD (1996)
Brave The Storm songs
$12.39
| | Shy Excess All Areas CD (1987) 13trax; Bonus Tracks; Japan
Brave The Storm album
$25.59
| | Praying Mantis Time Tells No Lies CD (1981) (Import) Import; Germany
Brave The Storm CD music
$32.85
| | Jim & Jesse Old Dominion Masters CDs (1999)
Brave The Storm music CDs
$49.29 This four-disc set compiles material from nine Jim & Jesse albums originally released on their own record label in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as a few radio show recordings and some previously uncompiled singles. In 1972, tired of the pressure they were feeling from the major labels to modernize their sound with drums and electric guitars, the brothers Jim & Jesse McReynolds formed the Old Dominion label and began producing ...
| | Haggard Awaking The Gods: Live In Mexico CD (2006) (Import) Import; Germany
Brave The Storm songs
$15.75
| | Molly Johnson Another Day CD (2002)
Brave The Storm album
$27.95 Jazz singer Molly Johnson has done time in both pop and art rock bands and has served as an opening act for such blues and R&B superstars as Ray Charles and B.B. King, so the stylistic range in evidence on her first album for Narada Jazz doesn't come as much of a surprise. She jumps from bracing and jazz-inflected pop/rock (the radio remix of "Another Day") to a piano-based reggae/R&B hybrid ("Ooh Child/Redemption Song") without missing a beat, and slinks her way through torchy blues numbers with equal facility. On the downside, "Celie's Blues" sounds just as anachronistic and politically forced in this version as it did popping up out of nowhere in the middle of The Color Purple, and the fact that Johnson's delivery comes across as little more than a Billie Holiday impression just makes things worse. On the other hand, her version of "Summertime," which was an inevitable song ...
| | Tab Benoit Sea Saint Sessions CD (2003)
Brave The Storm CD music
$8.55 Tab Benoit's third album in just over two years (including his collaboration with Jimmy Thackery) is, like his previous few releases, a loose and homey affair. Recorded at the titular New Orleans studio and featuring Crescent City guests Cyril Neville and Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, along with funky Meters Brian Stoltz and George Porter sitting in on various tracks, this is a live-sounding disc with few obvious overdubs. Benoit's road band, comprised of bassist Carl DuFrene and drummer Darryl White, knows how to keep the pocket mean and lean yet flexible, giving the guitarist room to roam against the funky rhythm section. Except for an explosive cover of Howlin' Wolf's "Howlin' for My Darling" and Eddie Jones' slow blues "Sufferin' Mind," the tunes are written or co-written by Benoit. As the title of "Solid Simple Thing" suggests, these songs aren't breaking new ground, but they do allow the singer to stretch out, albeit in territory familiar to his fans. So even though "Darkness" is a straight slow blues, Benoit's gutsy voice, powerful delivery, and swampy guitar make it a perfect vehicle to showcase his strengths. A call-and-response duet with Boudreaux featuring Benoit playing slinky slide was probably written as it was first played, providing a friendly living-room vibe that feels as comfy as a pair of old jeans. Neville adds some frothy funk when he sings on a sexy "Plareen Man," trading verses with Benoit, who contributes a frisky, sinuous solo as Boudreaux slaps his tambourine. "Hustlin' Down in New Orleans," with guitarist Stoltz, ...
| | Carcass Choice Cuts CD (2004)
Brave The Storm music CDs
$14.05 Irrational as it may seem for an uncompromising band like Carcass to issue a conventional "greatest hits" album, enough years have passed and enough dust settled since the band's demise for 2004's Choice Cuts to feel not only justifiably apropos, but inexplicably delayed in its arrival. Sure, stringent metalheads could make endless arguments about the superior experience of discovering original studio albums like the grindcore landmark Symphonies of Sickness and the avant-death metal masterpiece Heartwork individually. But considering the group's radical evolution over the course of recording these and three more seminal LPs -- not to mention ...
| | Allegiance CD (2005)
Brave The Storm songs
$12.05
| | Danzig 2: Lucifuge CD (2007) (Import) England
Brave The Storm album
$9.84 
| | Oliver Nelson Blues And The Abstract Truth CD (1961) Reissue; Remastered
Brave The Storm CD music
$9.29 The late Oliver Nelson had such a successful career as a composer of film and TV music ("Theme From the Six Million Dollar Man") and arranger that it often overshadowed his abilities as a jazz musician. In 1961, Nelson assembled a fantastic small ensemble, including Eric Dolphy, Bill Evans, and Freddie Hubbard, for a session of six original compositions. Nelson was also an excellent, bluesy-toned saxophonist (heard here on tenor and alto) and his tunes cover a variety of moods, from the elegiac "Stolen Moments" to the wryly humorous, Aaron Copeland-like "Hoe-Down" to the rippling "Cascades." Dolphy's edgy, vocally inspired alto sound, the surging brassy tone of Hubbard's trumpet, and the swinging lyricism of Bill Evans make a potent combination, contributing to BLUES's status as a classic of post-bop jazz.
Beautifully recorded and easily the best album of his career, which, ...
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