| | Tetsuo Sakurai LM20 CD - Import Tetsuo Sakurai Discography of CDs
Tetsuo Sakurai LM20 Songs | 1. | Chaos - (studio) |
| 2. | I'm Gonna Catch You - (studio) |
| 3. | Dispensation - (studio) |
| 4. | Alisa - (studio) |
| 5. | Firewater - (studio) |
| 6. | Funky Punch - (studio) |
| 7. | Sailing Alone - (studio) |
| 8. | Red Zone - (studio) |
| 9. | Bass Solo 2000 - (studio) |
| 10. | You Can Do It - (studio) |
| 11. | 45c - (studio) |
| LM20 Review
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Purchase LM20 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Mike Bloomfield Super Session CD (1968) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
LM20 album
$6.75 A surprise best-seller when it was first released, this mostly improvised pairing of singer/keyboardist/producer Al Kooper with two major guitar heroes of the day sounds fascinating all these years later precisely because of the distance of time--nobody makes records like this any more. The material runs the gamut from folk pop (covers of Donovan and Dylan), to blues ("Albert's Shuffle," "You Don't Love Me"), to heady jams ("His Holy Modal Majesty"), to big-band jazz ("Harvey's Tune").
All the tunes make effective templates for the kind off-the-cuff music-making that in less capable hands might have resulted in simple noodling. In fact, although Bloomfield and Stills don't play together on any of the cuts (Bloomfield played on one side of the original LP, Stills on the other), all three principals get off ...
| | Norah Jones Come Away With Me CD (2002) SACD Hybrid
LM20 CD music
$15.49 COME AWAY WITH ME won the 2003 Grammy Awards for Album Of The Year, Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Engineered Album (Non-Classical).
"Don't Know Why" won the 2003 Grammy Awards for Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.
Arif Mardin won the ...
| | Stan Getz People Time CDs (1992)
LM20 music CDs
$25.69
| | Keith Jarrett Testament: Paris/London CDs (2009)
LM20 songs
$27.29
| | Everette Harp First Love CD (2009)
LM20 album
$15.09 On FIRST LOVE, contemporary jazz saxophonist and composer Everette Harp moves deeper into the space he addressed on 2007's excellent MY INSPIRATION. Produced by George Duke, the meld of acoustic and electric instruments here is perfectly balanced. Melodic and harmonic structures are much more complex and don't always fit the C-jazz cookie-cutter mold. Check his original "The Council of Nicea," one of the most satisfying things here. Harp's tenor is accompanied by James Genus' acoustic bass, and some spot-on breaks by Terri Lyne Carrington, a beautiful ...
| | Best Of Leonard Cohen CD (1975)
LM20 CD music
$6.75
| | Erroll Garner Campus Concert/Feeling Is Believing CD (1998)
LM20 music CDs
$7.75 This release covers both a live concert performed at Purdue University in 1964, and Garner's first album release of ...
| | Norman Blake Old Ties: The Rounder Heritage Series CD (2002)
LM20 songs
$14.65 Recorded between 1971 and 1990. Includes liner notes by Jon Weisberger.
Norman Blake will never be known as a revolutionary. His starkly honest guitar picking and gently lulling voice have sounded almost exactly the same for the 30-some years that the Rounder release Old Ties encompasses. Often performing solo, occasionally accompanied ...
| | Cab Calloway Volume 2: 1935-1940 CDs (2003) (Import) Box Set; United Kingdom
LM20 album
$26.79 JSP continued its steady trawl through the discography of the swing era's most extroverted bandleader with Vol. 2: 1935-1940, the second four-disc box of Cab Calloway chronological recordings. Four years beyond his breakout with "Minnie the Moocher," Calloway was leading one of the most entertaining bands of the '30s (thanks in large part to his own frontman skills), and after the first session or two here, he began filling it with more musical talent. Ben Webster makes his first appearance midway through the first disc, for a May 1936 date, and though he only appears on 16 selections, his replacement -- Chu Berry -- lost barely a step filling in. On that same 1936 date, bassist Milt Hinton joined the rock-solid rhythm section (also including Leroy Maxey, and later Cozy Cole, on drums, and Benny Payne on piano), for a stint that would last to the end of the decade. With all the talent on display, ...
| | Ana Caram Hollywood Rio CD (2004) (Import) SACD Hybrid
LM20 CD music
$18.15
| | Con Mucho Ritmo! The Very Best Of Tropijazz CD (2005)
LM20 music CDs
$9.89
| | As Mercenarias Beginning Of The End Of The World CD (2005) (Import) United Kingdom
LM20 songs
$19.55
| | Awol One Killafornia CD (2005)
LM20 album
$11.49
| | Tokagettan Ongeki Shu TV Anime Animation Soundtrack CD (2007) (Import)
$51.25 | | Andrea Berg Best Of CD (2007) (Import) Germany
LM20 CD music
$28.89
| | It All Started With Doo Wop CDs (2008) Box Set
LM20 music CDs
$127.59 Time was when doo wop collections flooded the market -- baby boomers looking to relive their childhoods scarfed up millions of them and record companies were happy to oblige, as the material was relatively inexpensive to license. Today, those who fondly remember the '50s and early '60s are largely in their fifties and early sixties, and while they might still harbor a soft spot for the oldies, they most likely own their favorites on CD by now or at least know of a satellite radio station that plays the stuff. Time Life is the master at aggressive marketing to that demographic, though, and also the master at finding just the right tracks for these types of compilations. Label execs must have done their homework if they decided at this late date to release nine CDs' and a DVD's worth of vocal harmony music (the term preferred by hardcore doo woppers) -- someone figured there was a still a strong market for this music and set out to do it right. They succeeded wildly. It All Started with Doo Wop may just be the single most definitive collection of this music compiled into one box set. It's not that these songs can't all be found elsewhere -- this isn't about rarities (plenty of other comps will get you those). It's about the best of the best. The four actual two-CD sets falling under the banner of It All Started with Doo Wop miss few of the all-time classics. From the ballads like "Could This Be Magic" by the Dubs, "Gloria" by the Cadillacs, "Just to Be with You" by the Passions, and "Lovers Never Say Goodbye" by the Flamingos to the classic uptempo rockers like Curtis Lee's "Pretty Little Angel Eyes," "Yakety Yak" by the Coasters, "Church Bells May Ring" by the Willows, and Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers' "I Promise to Remember," this is as solid a set of doo wop as any out there. Some may argue whether groups like the Four Seasons and Jay & the Americans or individuals such as Jackie Wilson and solo Dion actually qualify as doo wop, but their records sound just fine in the context of the set, hardly something to complain about. ...
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