| | L Pierre Touchpool Vinyl LP Record L Pierre Discography of CDs
Features 32 rockabilly classics from the 50's & 60's, tracks from Lloyd Arnold, The Whitecaps & Johnny Edwards, Paul Carnes, Carl Miller, Bob Hicks and The Fenders, Dale Vaughan & The Starnotes & many more. 2000. L Pierre Touchpool Songs | 1. | Crush |
| 2. | Rotspots From The Crap Map |
| 3. | Jim Dodge Dines At The Penguin Cafe |
| 4. | Baby Breeze |
| 5. | Fan-Dance |
| 6. | Velbon |
| 7. | Total Horizontal |
| Touchpool Review
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Purchase Touchpool CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Hobo Bop CD (2000) (Import) Germany
Touchpool album
$20.79
| | Teenage Favorites CD (1994) (Import) Germany
Touchpool CD music
$23.19 Compared with Buffalo Bop's usual rockabilly and teen-rebel collections, this 33-song compilation is kind of dorky -- sort of a nerd's picture of rock & roll (the Richie Cunningham as opposed to the Fonzie playlist). Nobody appearing on this CD ever aspired to be really cool like Elvis or Gene Vincent; Ricky Nelson was as far as they got. But it's all great fun in its well-crafted, highly produced way, and some of the artists and labels here will actually be familiar--Tony Orlando ("The Loneliest"), Steve Lawrence ("Pretty Blue Eyes"), Milo Liggett ("Gold and Silver"), and the Barker Brothers ("Hey Little Mama") recorded for outfits like Monument, Epic, Brunswick, ABC, and Hickory. The Wonders ("Cuttin' Out"), the R-Dells ("You Say"), David Box ("Little Lonely Summer Girl") et al weren't rebels, they were would-be teen idols, and they weren't averse to delivering songs that were essentially teen-pop, albeit often with a good beat and some fairly prominent guitars amid the orchestras and backing choruses. Tommy Lam's "Blue Willow" actually has a guitar break, but it's more like good middle-year Elvis than real rock & roll. Much of this stuff was just as likely to have strings, but that doesn't stop it from being good romantic soft-rock. "Lazy Daisy" by Bobby Boston and "Just Give Me Your Heart" by Johnny ...
|  | | Also Bought |
| Rockabilly Acetates CD (2002)
Touchpool music CDs
$17.89 Rockabilly Acetates is one of the hotter CDs ever issued by the ubiquitous German label Buffalo Bop, despite some uneven moments -- opening with "Guitar Rock" by Joe Snyder and Curtis Wren, working as the Moonlighters, the 31-song CD starts out in overdrive, slowing down only for "Never, Never, Never," the duo's sub-Everly Brothers attempt at a harmony ballad. The Detonators sound more "black" than any rock & roll act that this reviewer has heard in over three dozen Buffalo Bop releases, their rendition of "Honey Hush" calling to mind any number of early-'50s jump blues numbers pushing their way toward rock & roll, and their version of "Slow Down" seems equally far across the color line. Danny Dell's swamp rock-flavored "Pogo Walk" sounds as though it was maybe one take away from a commercial release, while Jim Aguire's "Wildcat Daddy" seems finished, a perfect, twangy country number with a crazy tempo and a twisting guitar solo that made this reviewer feel cross-eyed following it. Bud Brees also sounds the complete professional -- his tight, jangly "The Big Hit" never did live up to what its title promised, however. Tracks eight, 10, 11, 20, and 23, incidentally, achieve new levels of obscurity and archeology even for the folks ...
| | Ready Men Get Ready CD (1995)
Touchpool songs
$13.05
|  | | Also Bought |
| Hang Loose CD (2000) (Import) Germany
Touchpool album
$20.79
| | High School Caesar CD (1994) (Import) Germany
Touchpool CD music
$20.19 30 tracks, w. Walt Benton, Eddie McKinney, Charlie Gore, Jerry Parson, Ron Berry, Jerry Siefert, Jerry Fuller+
This is a pretty uneven collection, which is not surprising given the fact that the title track by Reggie Perkins is one of the coolest things here and it's from a juvenile delinquency B-movie of the same name. The Jays' "Panic Stricken" is pretty fair rock ...
| | Large Tunes CDs (2000)
Touchpool music CDs
$13.95
| | Ursula 1000 Kinda Kinky CD (2002) (Import) Bonus Track; Hong Kong
Touchpool songs
$23.65 Loungecore DJ/producer Ursula 1000 fashions himself the post-millennial Esquivel, populating his second production album with 14 groovy, pleasant, slightly hip throwaways that leave few stylistic stones unturned ...
| | James Ingham Bushy Hiya CD (1999) (Import)
Touchpool album
$19.69
| | Brand Nubian Time's Running Out CD (2007)
Touchpool CD music
$12.79
| | Diet Bang Profan CD (2008) (Import) Import
Touchpool music CDs
$30.19
| | Porcupine Tree Signify CDs (1997) Special Edition
Touchpool songs
$14.15 This special edition features a complete bonus album called Insignificance that was previously released as a fan club cassette in an edition of only 500 copies.
This Kscope edition of the album comes packeaged in a luxury rigid digibook.
The first proper album by the full band, Signify was the next great step forward for Porcupine Tree, a distinct advancement in how well the foursome could completely rock out as well as find its own narcotic style of ambient exploration. The title track signals intentions clearly after the fragmentary sample-collage start of "Bornlivedie" kicks things off. Based on a storming riff from Wilson, the Edwin/Maitland team provide a crisp, driving beat, while Barbieri throws some intriguingly aggressive keyboard work, nervy and unsettling, to offset the calmer parts he also adds to fill things out. Everyone gets to show a little bit of individual flair as the album progresses. Edwin punctuates the epic surge of "Sleep of No Dreaming" with some plucked double bass as well as electric, while Maitland himself takes over on (wordless) vocals and full composition for "Light Mass Prayers," a minimal, entrancing piece. One thing that hasn't noticeably changed much is Wilson's general songwriting and ear for arrangements -- good, but there's little in the way of distinct change in style, leaving it to the performance of the band as a whole to provide the album's own unique stamp. For all that Wilson may once again be singing obliquely on the pressures and nature of end-of-century life, he still does so in an engagingly left-of-center way. Consider the portrait of an incipient Internet/cyberpunk world in "Every Home Is Wired" or the snap-or-not? dilemma of "Darkmatter," which closes the album on a subtly tense note, besides being the best song Peter Gabriel-era Genesis never wrote. The often gripping instrumental pieces which are as much a band trademark as anything else appear throughout, including the combination ...
| | Trainwreck Riders Perch Vinyl LP (2009) With CD; Limited Edition
Touchpool album
$15.05
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