Very Soothing & inspirational Why are there not more beautiful harp songs recorded by Nashville Strings? I love this harp music I could listen to it forever. It is like finding piece within. Submitted by israel-light777 (Winterset, IA, USA) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
$9.79 When master warrior Kwun (Jet Li) returns to his village to find that his young son Ting is the sole survivor of vicious massacre by Manchu soldiers, he hits the vengeance trail, training the young boy in the martial arts along the way. For seven years, father and son are on the run. They encounter five Shaolin monks upon whom fragments of a treasure map have been tattooed. Before long, wicked Manchu leaders find out about the maps and set out in search of the masters. Kwun and Ting unite with the monks and brace themselves for the battle of their lives against the forces that destroyed their village. The breathtaking and often comical martial arts sequences were choreographed ...
$13.59 For their recent book, Voices of a People's History of the United States, Howard Zinn and Anthony Arnove selected testimonies of people throughout U.S. history who struggled against slavery, racism and war, against ...
$133.39 1990's THE CLASSIC CARL PERKINS is a mammoth, five-CD, 136-track box set that's chock-full of hits, forgotten tracks, and rarities. The set focuses on Perkins' prime, especially his classic recordings for both the Sun and Columbia labels in the '50s and '60s. While it may prove excessive for the casual fan (for example, there are three consecutive takes of "Blue Suede Shoes" and "Honey Don't"), THE CLASSIC CARL PERKINS will serve as a ...
$17.09 On Crumbling the Antiseptic Beauty, there are hints of Felt's later English pop grandeur -- on the instrumental opener "Evergreen Dazed," for example, which (sans rhythm section) pits guitarist Maurice Deebank's cascading, euphoric noodlings against Lawrence Hayward's clear acoustic strums -- but overall this is a fairly primitive affair. There is a stripped-down psychedelic feel to certain tracks, with drums pounding out a tribalistic, rolling beat beneath Deebank's complex guitar runs and Hayward's obtuse vocals. Later in their career, particularly ...