| | Tony Hernando Shades Of Truth CD - Import Tony Hernando Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Tony Hernando, the number one guitarist from Spain, has released The Shades Of Truth, his second solo album. This CD features Mike Terrana on drums, while Hernando's playing ranges from chicken picking to funky, and from hard rock/shred to fusion to progressive. The Shades Of Truth is an album for guitar fans who are looking not only for "high tech shredding" but beautiful compositions. Keyboard wizard Vitalij Kuprij guests on one track ("Outsiders"), while super Texas guitarist Andy Timmons lays down fiery solos on "The Edge" and "Eleven 30". Demonstration of tremendous guitar ability and crystal clear production set this energetic CD apart from the pack. Tony Hernando Shades Of Truth Songs | 1. | At The Crossroads |
| 2. | Behind The Catwalk |
| 3. | House Of Glass |
| 4. | Uncommon Vision |
| 5. | Slow Blues |
| 6. | The Silence Of Loss |
| 7. | Broken Hero |
| 8. | The Edge |
| 9. | Outsiders |
| 10. | Eleven 30 |
| 11. | Still Believe |
| Shades Of Truth Music Review Purchase Shades Of Truth CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Yanni - Live At The Acropolis DVD (1993)
Shades Of Truth album
$9.69
| | Greg Howe CD (1988)
Shades Of Truth CD music
$14.55 During the mid- to late '80s, talent scout and Shrapnel Records owner Mike Varney was the ultimate source for new high-tech ...
| | Joe Satriani - Live In San Francisco DVDs (2000) DTS Sound
Shades Of Truth music CDs
$11.19
| | Jordan Rudess Feeding The Wheel CD (2001)
Shades Of Truth songs
$13.85 On Feeding the Wheel, Jordan Rudess has modernized the keyboard sounds pioneers like E. Power Biggs, Rick Wakeman, Gary Wright, Alan Hovhaness, and Keith Emerson broke ground with. The latter-day third ivory player in Dream Theater takes Gary Wright's Dream Weaver a step or two into the twilight zone. "Headspace" is a nice moody piece, kind of like Edgar Froese outside of Kraftwerk with more activity in the mix. "Quantum Soup" features Steve Morse of the Dregs on guitar solo with Terry Bozzio of Missing Persons playing percussion, the first of eight numbers the ex-Zappa drummer provides the bottom for. Track two has its own evolution, from jazz/progressive rock to a bassy funk eight minutes into the tune, with the 11 minutes of "Quantum ...
| | Dave Martone Demon's Dream CD (2002) (Import) Finland
Shades Of Truth album
$18.55
| | Stratovarius Elements PT. 2 CD (2003)
Shades Of Truth CD music
$10.45 Scandinavian prog-power-metal specialists Stratovarius begin their sequel to 2002's Elements, Pt. 1 with a neo-classical dirge called "Alpha and Omega," which showcases their melodic muscle and top-notch playing. Musically, the group are masters of fantasy-metal excess, but bereft of the Dungeons & Dragons hyperbole employed by similar artists. The series as a whole draws from blueprints laid out by Helloween's Keeper of the Seven Keys series, borrowing liberally from their nursery ...
| | Barenaked Ladies Stunt CD (1998)
Shades Of Truth music CDs
$12.49 "One Week" was nominated for the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal.
STUNT is another tightly wound, witty, melodic Barenaked Ladies album, with songs that range from dangerously manic to contemplative and nearly sweet. The slightly psychotic white boy rap on "One Week" employs wacky lyrical ingenuity, with such lines as "Hot like wasabi when I bust rhymes/Big like LeAnn Rimes." On the other hand, the charm of "In The Car" lies in its twangy alt-country sound and a sense of nostalgia for a more naive time. Barenaked Ladies' lyrics can veer awfully close to being precious, but they avoid crossing the line with a magical combination of intelligence, biting cynicism, and a refusal to take themselves too seriously.
STUNT is another tightly wound, witty, melodic Barenaked Ladies album, with songs that range from dangerously manic to contemplative and nearly sweet. The slightly psychotic white boy rap on "One Week" employs wacky lyrical ingenuity, with such lines as "Hot like wasabi when I bust rhymes/Big like LeAnn Rimes." On the other hand, the charm of "In The Car" lies in its twangy alt-country sound and a sense of nostalgia for a more nanve time. Barenaked Ladies' lyrics can veer awfully close to being precious, but they avoid crossing the line with a magical combination of intelligence, biting cynicism, and a refusal to take themselves too seriously.
Studios, Scarborough, Ontario in March 1998.
Recorded ...
| | Martin Newell Wayward Genius Of Martin CD (1999) (Import) United Kingdom
Shades Of Truth songs
$15.85
| | Joao Paulo Esquina CD (2001)
Shades Of Truth album
$13.39
| | Voyager Series: Scottish Melodies CD (2002)
Shades Of Truth CD music
$7.89
| | Wyver No Defiance Of Fate CD (2005) (Import)
Shades Of Truth music CDs
$26.29
| | Saliva Survival Of The Sickest CD (2004)
Shades Of Truth songs
$10.85
| | Napalm Death Utopia Banished CD (1992) Bonus Tracks
Shades Of Truth album
$10.19 Napalm Death's evolution continues with Utopia Banished, another change of direction for the band. Here Napalm Death stylistically veer somewhere between the grindcore noise assaults of their early, seminal albums (Scum [1987], From Enslavement to Obliteration [1988]) and the straightforward death metal of their more recent releases (Harmony Corruption [1990], Mass Appeal Madness [1991]). However, they also incorporate quite a bit of experimentalism into the synthesis, resulting in a curious album that doesn't fall into any preconceived category (if you need a tag, consider it an expansive death metal approach to savage grindcore aesthetics). Napalm Death thus go back to their roots in a way. Few of the songs top three minutes, and they often break into frenzied breaks of whirlwind blasting (highlighting new drummer Danny Herrera). Then again, Colin Richardson gives the songs a lustrous production sheen, and the band crafts elaborate songs that ...
| | Lichens Omns CDs (2007)
Shades Of Truth CD music
$14.09 Like a lot of his ambient peers, Lichens both suffers and benefits from a remarkable sense of sameness. These soft tones wave like flags in a light breeze, a single fabric in constant gentle flux. The result is at once cool and becoming, inviting but diffuse. OMNS may not be the ambient record to win over the unconverted -- Keith Fullerton Whitman's stomach-loosening Lisbon holds that title -- but it offers plenty of attention-getting flourishes atop these spare tones, albeit as simple as the guitar flutters of the first track or the piano melancholia of the second. For all its impressive intellectualism, it remains firmly committed to pleasing the listener, even forcing the artist's personality to the point of including a pensive live DVD with the record. This performance is a nice enough addendum but serves more as a visual corollary to the five sanguine beauties from the album proper. ~ Clayton Purdom
Like a lot of his ambient peers, Lichens both suffers and benefits from a remarkable sense of sameness. These soft tones ...
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