| | DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs CD DJ's Choice Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs Music DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs Songs DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs Music Review Purchase DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Bob Marley And The Wailers - The Legend Live DVD (1979) Subtitled
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs album
$15.99
| | Jimmy Cliff DVD (2003)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs CD music
$13.59
| | Ub40 - Homegrown In Holland Live DVD (2004)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs music CDs
$15.15
| | Kenny Loggins More Songs From Pooh Corner CD (2000)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs songs
$8.29
| | Raffi One Light, One Sun CD (1985)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs album
$11.89
| | Peter, Paul & Mary Holiday Celebration CD (1988)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs CD music
$8.39
| | Laura Simms Four Legged Tales CD (1999) (Import)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs music CDs
$14.45
| | Kids Nursery Rhymes, Vol. 3 CD (2002)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs songs
$7.89
| | Blues Image Open CD (1970)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs album
$11.49 Blues Image's second album was their most successful, in large part because of the inclusion of their huge hit single "Ride Captain Ride." The rest of the record, however, shows them to be a band in search of a more individual voice, borrowing heavily as it does from Jimi Hendrix ("Love Is the Answer," "Pay My Dues"), Creedence ...
| | Guidance Trust CD (2002)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs CD music
$10.15 The Guidance Tale In the year 2000, an Israeli band named Guidance was founded by three school buddies, Dori Chee (Lead Vocals), Ofir Abe (Drums), and Sefi Brown (Bass Guitar).After serving in the army for three years, the group packed their bags and traveled to Vancouver Canada, where they were exposed to various genres and bands. While in Canada, Guidance tied relationships with other bands and played showcases at clubs and universities and received very positive feedback from the crowd.Canada inspired Guidance to write the first three songs, which signified the birth of a focused style, and professionalism. Guidance are influenced by bands like Tool, Stained, Pearl Jam ...
| | John Doe Year In The Wilderness CD (2007)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs music CDs
$12.45 While there's no arguing that John Doe is a gifted songwriter and has one of the finest voices in the great state ...
| | Iworship: Kids 3 CD (2007)
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs songs
$11.39
| | Cherry Poppin Daddies Susquehanna CD (2008) (Import) United Kingdom
DJ'S Choice: Easter Bunny's Favorite Songs album
$18.55 The Cherry Poppin' Daddies came together in the gray light of the pre-grunge dawn, when a University of Oregon chemistry major named Steve Perry posed a question to fellow musician friends: what if a punk rock rhythm section shared a practice space with jazz-schooled horn players and an equally trained keyboardist? The beaker-busting result made a stellar EP, sold out local clubs and soon drew comparisons to contemporaries like Fishbone, Faith No More and Bad Brains. It also irritated the local PC police. When the moniker hit the streets of "liberal" Eugene, OR, an angry group hired a lawyer who proceeded to hamstring any hope of a case by physically removing the band's fliers - a practice known as censorship (apparently in violation of an obscure constitutional provision). Not ones to count their blessings, the Daddies then employed a kinetic sculpture of an ejaculating male member - affectionately called the "Dildorado" - as a stage prop.Musically, they were equally out of step with a regional scene that mssrs. Cobain and Vedder and Roger Nusic had come to define. But even relegated to "ska" bills, the Daddies distinguished themselves by incorporating big band swing into their eclectic mix (one fan likened the band to a David Johansen backing group that could play new York Dolls and Buster Poindexter tunes). "Drunk Daddy", the first song on the first full-length release, careens through a blazing horn chart to a chilling climax when Perry assumes the quavering voice of an abused boy staring down his approaching father: Okay, Dad. You can beat me But you'll never beat meThe tenacity these lines imply carried the band through two more indie releases and into 1997. As the phrase "swing scene" rolled off the critical number of tongues necessary for mass acceptance, Universal subsidiary Mojo got behind an already-available compilation called "Zoot Suit Riot: The Swingin' Hits Of..." When Los Angeles' KROQ put the eponymous lead-off track into rotation, it became clear that modern rock radio was stretching its format to include sounds about as disparate from Nirvana as one can imagine. Some lamented the change, some praised it; either way, these musicians from Eugene, OR found themselves strolling through the intersection of Cobain Street and Timberlake Avenue when America ...
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