| | C&C Music Factory CD - Import C&C Music Factory Discography of CDs
Final album by Robert Clivilles after death of David Cole in 1994. C&C Music Factory Songs | 1. | What Can I Do (To Make You Stay) |
| 2. | Don't Stop The Music |
| 3. | I'll Always Be Around |
| 4. | Loving You |
| 5. | Searching |
| 6. | Till The End Of Time |
| 7. | Still |
| 8. | I Wanna Blow Your Mind |
| 9. | It's So Easy To Love You |
| 10. | Latinos Del Mundo (Siguen Bailando) |
| C&C Music Factory Review
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Purchase C&C Music Factory CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Black Eyed Peas Monkey Business CD (2005) Digipak
C&C Music Factory
$10.45 The Black Eyed Peas' fourth outing, MONKEY BUSINESS, picks up right where their platinum-selling breakout album, ELEPHUNK, left off, with the feel of a non-stop party run by an ultra-savvy DJ. "Pump It" opens the disc on a straight sample of Dick Dale's surf classic "Misirlou," as the three MCs of BEP float in and out--sometimes rapid-fire, sometimes measured--with Fergie stepping in on cue to alternately sing softly or with deep, soulful emotion.
The Peas' origins are tied to the DJ-driven world of breakdancing, and that flavor saturates MONKEY BUSINESS, as beats drop in and out, tracks blend into other tracks, and a lighthearted spirit of sophisticated ecstasy prevails. The aforementioned "Pump It" slides flawlessly into the lively single "Don't Phunk with My Heart," and the stage for the album is set. Icons James Brown and Sting drop by, on the uncompromisingly funky "They Don't Want Music" and the reggae-soaked "Union," respectively, but they're just guests on board for the ride (along with Justin Timberlake, John Legend, and others), part of the musical mural. The Black Eyed ...
| | Jive Bunny & The Mastermixers Jive Bunny - The Album CD (1990)
C&C Music Factory
$8.39
| | 2562 Unbalance CD (2009)
C&C Music Factory
$12.78 Dave Huisman's first 2562 album, Aerial, contained a handful of certifiably massive dubstep tracks, but the album was sometimes skeletal to a fault -- not quite featureless, yet dangerously close to it, more akin to a second-tier release from a dub techno label like Echocord. That becomes all the more clear through Unbalance. Everything sounds livelier, more active. Huisman fills the empty spaces, never over-stuffs them, and the percussion is practically ...
| | Ben Frost By The Throat CD (2009)
C&C Music Factory
$13.64 With 2007's Theory of Machines, composer Ben Frost combined academically constructed electro-acoustic music, doom metal, post-rock drones, and minimal classical touches with strings and piano. It was a difficult yet clearly intoxicating listening experience. The melding of clinical technology and human elements -- i.e., real instruments -- as a way of bringing the listener in made it nearly unbearable, but so utterly original that it compelled one to engage it. The only act close to this was Coil at their early best. By the Throat is, if anything, even more so, though the manner of construction is very different -- even if many of the same elements are used. This time the approach -- which is clear by the title and the pack of wolves in a snowstorm on the cover -- is in reverse. On By the Throat he uses far more organic textures as a base, whether they be from animal or human worlds, layering electronics and other effects atop them. There are real melodies at work in most of these pieces, and because there are, when harsh industrial noise, metallic guitars, and the sounds of wolves themselves are placed atop gentle ambient drones, strings, piano, dulcimers, and other acoustic instruments, the effect is simply nail-bitingly harrowing. Take the opening track, "Killshot." Minimal synth textures establish a skeletal melodic pattern for 30 seconds before a wave of gated -- and harsh -- sonic waves overshadow them completely ...
| | Delerium Chimera CDs (2003) Enhanced CD
C&C Music Factory
$14.19 Disc 2 is an Enhanced CD, which contains ...
| | Queer As Folk CD (2001) Original Soundtrack; U.S. Version
C&C Music Factory
$7.59 This disc offers the music featured in the TV series QUEER AS FOLK. The show began in England, and was initially deemed too controversial to be shown ...
| | Laurie Vocal Groups: The Sixties Sound CD (1992) (Import) United Kingdom
C&C Music Factory
$16.95
| | Noa Live In Israel CD (2006) Import
C&C Music Factory
$23.29
| | Hrvatski Track4(2wayssuperimposed) CD (2006) (Import)
C&C Music Factory
$30.19 WITH KEITH FULLERTON WHITMAN
| | Tiffani Marie Exposed CD (2006)
C&C Music Factory
$10.15
| | Klaxons Golden Skans (EP) CD (2007) (Import)
C&C Music Factory
$17.09
| | Ibiza Sunset: Flamenco Chill Out CD (2007)
C&C Music Factory
$9.69
| | Moomin Moo Mix CD (2007) (Import)
$31.55 | | Duke Ellington Cosmic Scene CD (1958)
C&C Music Factory
$15.25 Still riding the success of his triumphant concert at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, Duke Ellington in 1958 decided to reduce his touring orchestra to a nonet dubbed "the Spacemen," and recorded this lone project with them for the Columbia label, here reissued by Mosaic Singles and heard in stereo for the first time. Perhaps inspired by the first orbiting satellites, Ellington is not taking cues from George Russell or Sun Ra, whose extraterrestrial inspirations led them to even more progressive paths. This large ensemble is playing mostly standards, but the arrangements and solos carve an integrated yet elasticized concept that allows for a more expanded role for the ensemble's trombonists Quentin "Butter" Jackson, John Sanders, and Britt Woodman, and select soloists. One in the solo spotlight is Clark Terry on flugelhorn exclusively, putting his fabled trumpet aside. The classic material presented includes clarinetist Jimmy Hamilton's features "Avalon" and "Early Autumn," the slinky stripper pole blues version of "St. Louis Blues" with Ellington's piano taking the lead, and two versions of "Body & Soul," with tenor saxophonist Paul Gonsalves completely extrapolating and re-harmonizing the main take, while faithfully playing the original melody on the alternate selection. There's a modified "Perdido," an animated and perky "Midnight Sun" that deviates from any other slow and ...
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