| | Journey To The Heart CD - Import
Compilation. Relaxing music.NAPRA Review (09-10/02, p.75) - "...Drawing from a range of artists, styles, and cultures, this mostly instrumental sampler is an aural excursion into tranquil spaces..." Journey To The Heart Music Journey To The Heart Songs | 1. | Om Kar |
| 2. | Graceful |
| 3. | Hey Gopal |
| 4. | Amateyus |
| 5. | Jataka |
| 6. | Mantrika |
| 7. | Neytal |
| 8. | Ghanadarva |
| 9. | Jai Ambe |
| 10. | Soma |
| 11. | Emperor |
| 12. | Om Kar - (Meditation Mix) |
| Journey To The Heart Music Journey To The Heart Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Journey To The Heart CD - Import. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Journey To The Heart CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Peeling Of Tangerine CD (1999)
Journey To The Heart album
$11.29 Led by the multi-instrumentalist Ferraro brothers Al and Crash (they mainly played guitar), Tangerine started playing together in the late '60s, but the group's sole album was released in 1971. In many ways, The Peeling of Tangerine is a stellar, accomplished album. More than anyone, ...
| | Toe Fat/Toe Fat II CDs (1996) (Import) United Kingdom
Journey To The Heart CD music
$21.29
| | For Fox Sake CD (1970) Bonus Tracks
Journey To The Heart music CDs
$15.15 Originally released on Fontana Records in 1970. Includes liner notes by Steve Brayne.
Although it's considered a desirable psychedelic rarity in some collecting circles, For Fox Sake is an also-ran British psychedelic pop album of the sort that was a year or two behind the times upon its 1970 release. The best thing the Fox have going for them on this record is the swirling, at times piercing Hammond organ of Alex Lane. The songs, however, are ordinary trendy U.K. psychedelic pop with some solid vocal harmonies and light shades of soul music from time to time. Certainly "Second Hand Love" and "Lovely Day" sound extremely close in spots to the sort of music the Spencer Davis Group made just after the departure of Stevie Winwood, with some of the late Zombies' Baroque melodic ...
| | Gurus Are Hear! CD (2003)
Journey To The Heart songs
$15.29
| | Bardo Pond Selections, Vols. 1-4 CDs (2005)
Journey To The Heart album
$15.19
| | Mythos Purity CD (2006)
Journey To The Heart CD music
$8.79
| | Emerson, Lake, And Palmer Original Bootleg Series From Manticore Vaults, Vol. 1 CDs (2001)
Journey To The Heart music CDs
$45.35 This set and its companion, the eight-CD volume two, display all the strengths that made Emerson, Lake & Palmer one of the world's most popular bands during the '70s, and the weakness that comes with a trio's attempt to play complicated music. Keith Emerson was a virtuoso keyboard player, Greg Lake supplied a pleasant voice and flair for writing melodic songs, and Carl Palmer played drums as though he would perish if he stopped. But the group lacked the depth of fellow progressive rock bands, such as Yes and King Crimson. Those groups supplied multiple lead instrumentalists -- Yes with their guitar/keyboard tandem and Crimson with their venerable guitarist, Robert Fripp, and a series of cohorts who played saxophone, violin, or second guitar. These and other bands (e.g., Genesis) also relied on more than one songwriter. In ELP, Emerson was the lone lead player of consequence, while Lake was the only distinctive songwriter (for a handful of albums, anyway); Emerson was better at adapting pieces written by his classical heroes, especially Aaron Copland, than writing original material. When the band was on a roll, however, few of any genre could match them. The title of this package tells the story; these concert tapes were obtained from bootleg sources, most of them well-known to ELP aficionados. Inevitably, bootlegs display less than perfect sound. This collection is no exception. On the plus side, all are listenable. These shows, recorded between September 1971 and August 1972, contain much repetition. The lengthy "Take a Pebble" appears in all four concerts, as does "Tarkus" in its entirety. You'll have your fill of Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition" and Copland's "Hoedown." ELP diehards won't mind because the improvisation breaks by Emerson make each version distinct. Casual fans and the prog-curious will find this to be a bit much and would do better to search for the two-CD King Biscuit Flower Hour: Greatest Hits Live set or one of the band's early studio efforts. Three of the programs in volume one either support or introduce material from the Trilogy album. Surprisingly, the title cut was not on the play list. "Trilogy" was one of ELP's best moments, particularly ...
| | Tranquil World: On The Waters Of The Amazon CD
Journey To The Heart songs
$2.69
| | Great Ray Charles CD (1957) (Import) Argentina
Journey To The Heart album
$13.15 Charles' first 2 jazz sessions complete in chronological order. THE GREAT RAY CHARLES was originally ...
| | Bloody Sunday To Sentence The Dead CD (2005)
Journey To The Heart CD music
$11.15
| | Platters Forever Gold: The Great Pretender CD (2006)
Journey To The Heart music CDs
$9.79
| | Madjid Khaladj Hossein Alizadeh Iran, Masters Of Improvisation CD (2006) (Import)
Journey To The Heart songs
$21.85 Hossein ALIZADEH / Madjid KHALADJIRAN: MASTERS OF IMPROVISATIONPersian music: improvisations in the Esfahan modeThe modes in Persian music follow complex and diverse rules. Thus, during an improvisation, the musician can hardly anticipate the nature of the expression sought for. It is only on the spot in the presence of an audience that this expression can come about. Without an audience such a phenomenon certainly requires much more strength and concentration from the interpreter. The very conception of the different modes in Persian music is the fruit of various states of inner feelings. From dawn to dusk, we experience a multitude of emotions that can be expressed through a peculiar mode. The number of modes twelve like the twelve months of the year as well as the different melodic sequences arising from them, contribute to this phenomenon.With their more or less symmetrical intervals, the tempered modes (such as Segah, Shur and Nava) bring about a state of calm and concentration, while others (such as Tchahargah) do not follow these criteria of equilibrium but engender a feeling of movement and agitation. There are also modes expressing something that goes beyond these time and space criteria. The feeling they generate is universal. Such is the case with Avaz-e Esfahan, evoking love and separation. © Hossein Alizadeh-----------------Reviewer: F. Barhami (San Diego, California) A superb duo recording by two of Iran's greatest living instrumentalists. We'll also hear them in a trio with one of Iran's finest female voices. The music is impassioned, very refined, virtuosic, beautiful..& improvisatory. Lutenist HOSSEIN ALIZADEH has worked both outside & inside Iran. He currently lives in Tehran. Hand percussionist ...
| | Caribbean Spa CD (2007) Import
Journey To The Heart album
$13.25
|
|
|