| | Disney Karaoke Vol. 3 CD Disney Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
You've Got A Friend In Me/So This Is Love/Candle On The Wat Disney Karaoke Vol. 3 Music Disney Karaoke Vol. 3 Music Review Buy Disney Karaoke Vol. 3 CD Purchase Disney Karaoke Vol. 3 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Disney Karaoke Vol. 1 CD (2000)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$6.09
| | Disney Karaoke Vol. 2 CD (2000)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$5.89
| | Deep Six CD (1966) (Import) United Kingdom
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$16.15
| | Disney's Karaoke Series Disney Princess CD (2003)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$9.05
| | Disney's Karaoke Series Lion King CD (2003)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$7.69 Blister Pack
| | Disney's Karaoke Series Mary Poppins CD (2004)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$8.09
| | Michael Lee Firkins Chapter 11 CD (1995)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$14.65
| | Bon Jovi One Wild Night CD (2001) (Import) Japanese Edition
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$43.09 Japanese edition of 2001 live compilation includes two booklets, one eight-page booklet with color & black & white photos & a second 44 page booklet with lyrics to all 15 tracks & a list of Bon Jovi's tour dates from 1983 to 2001, including Jon Bon Jovi & Richie Sambora solo gigs. Packaged in an eight-sided digipak with full color photos.
Bon Jovi: Jon Bon Jovi (vocals, guitar); Bob Geldof (vocals); Richie Sambora (guitar, background vocals); David Bryan (keyboards, background vocals); Hugh McDonald, Alec John Such (bass, background vocals); Tico Torres (drums). Producers: Obie O'Brien, Bon Jovi, Richie Sambora, Luke Ebbin, Desmond Child. Recorded at various locations between April 28, 1985 & November 27, 2000. Includes liner notes by Lonn Friend. ONE WILD NIGHT is a live document by hard rock heroes Bon Jovi, featuring the hits "Livin' On A Prayer" and "You Give Love A Bad Name." Japanese edition has a different cover and expanded photos. Die-hard Bon Jovi fans will swear on their sacred Slippery When Wet albums that Bon Jovi is by far one of the best rock bands to sing (or scream) along to, no matter where you are -- in the car, on the road, or in your room, crooning into your hairbrush or anything you can get your hands on. One Wild Night: Live 1985-2001 is the perfect album for fans and newcomers alike, as it features a plentiful bounty of the band's biggest hits and most-screamable tunes. Set against the backdrop of the roars and accolades of their adoring fans at concerts across the world, the songs on this live album become even bigger hits that blast right out of your speakers, making you feel like you're part of the action. The opening track, "It's My Life," starts the Wild Night album off right, with Jon Bon Jovi singing what could be considered the band's credo: "It's my life/it's now or never/I ain't gonna live forever," as the band rocks on around him. The classic Bon Jovi tune, "Livin' on a Prayer" may be addictive enough for you to hurt your vocal chords, but Jovi pulls off the 1986 tune (from the Slippery When Wet album) seemingly without effort, working the crowd into a frenzy. Guitarist Richie Sambora struts his stuff on the live recording of "You Give Love a Bad Name" from the band's 2000 show in Zurich, ...
| | Twin Sisters Productions Songs For Traveling CD (2003)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$6.29
| | American Lullaby CD (2003)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$11.99
| | Eats Tapes Sticky Buttons CD (2005)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$9.55
| | 4 Kidz By Kidz CD (2005)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$5.39
| | Louise Swedish singe Hoffsten Collection 1991 - 2002 CD (2002) (Import) Sweden
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$22.35
| | Robyn Hitchcock Eye CD (1990)
Disney Karaoke Vol. 3
$10.95 Principally recorded at Hyde Street Studios, San Francisco, California in 1988 and 1989. Originally released on Twin/Tone (89175). Recording information: Hyde Street Studios, San Francisco, CA (1988-1989). Photographer: Cynthia L. Hunt. Six years after his superb I Often Dream of Trains, Robyn Hitchcock returned to the acoustic format of that album with Eye, and while the surfaces of the two albums are similar and Eye was eagerly embraced by fans, the tone of the two discs is considerably different. I Often Dream of Trains was a collection of songs written as Hitchcock was slowly returning to a career in music after a two-year layoff, and there's a striking if subtle power in the occasional tentative moments and understated tone. Eye, on the other hand, is a far more confident album, and Hitchcock's performances boast a precision that befits a musician who had been recording and touring at a steady clip for the past six years, especially in his splendid guitar work. The surreal whimsy of I Often Dream of Trains also takes a backseat on Eye, replaced by the relative clarity of "Cynthia Mask," an idiosyncratic but unblinking condemnation of Britain's failings during World War II, "Raining Twilight Coast," a point-of-view profile of various emotional hurts, and "Queen Elvis," a meditation on the effects of fame; the most Eye can offer in the way of humor is "Clean Steve" and "Certainly Clickot." But if Eye isn't the understated masterpiece I Often Dream of Trains was, it's Hitchcock's most consistent and satisfying album of the '80s; the songs are intelligent, effective and don't rely on his eccentricities to work, while the melodies are winning and his vocals are beautifully modulated. While Eye lacks Hitchcock's exciting electric guitar work, it's still the best representation of his music from a period when he made plenty of good records but few great ones.~ Mark Deming EYE is a solo album that Robyn Hitchcock ...
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