| | Tin Cans Speak Easy CD Tin Cans Discography of CDs
Photographer: Lenni.
Personnel: Claudius Wolke (vocals, double bass).
Audio Mixer: Tin Cans.
Tin Cans Speak Easy Songs | 1. | Tin Cans |
| 2. | Friday Night |
| 3. | Alabama Jail House |
| 4. | Blame It on Me |
| 5. | I Say You |
| 6. | Sealed With a Kiss |
| 7. | Here Is My Story |
| 8. | Senorita |
| 9. | Gonna Find My Baby |
| 10. | Don't Be Sad Song |
| 11. | We Know |
| 12. | Fly-Fiap Boogie |
| 13. | Broken Heart |
| 14. | Night Before |
| 15. | All by Myself |
| 16. | Is It Real? |
| 17. | Nutcracker Suite |
| Speak Easy Review
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Purchase Speak Easy CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Alice In Chains Black Gives Way To Blue CD (2009) Limited Edition; Digipak
Speak Easy
$12.59
| | Rosanne Cash List CD (2009)
Speak Easy
$11.99 After the dark and chilling themes of 2006's BLACK CADILLAC, which saw Rosanne Cash dealing with the deaths of her mother, Vivian Liberto, her father, Johnny Cash, and her stepmother, June Carter Cash -- all of whom passed within a two-year span -- one might assume that her next project would move into an even deeper level of bleakness, but with THE LIST, it's immediately clear that she has instead found a more measured place to stand. It's a lovely and redemptive outing that looks back to go forward. When Cash turned 18, her father, alarmed that his daughter only knew the songs that were getting played on the radio, gave her a list of what he considered 100 essential American songs; Cash ...
| | Kings Of Leon: Live At The O2 DVD (2009)
Speak Easy
$11.09 Standard Screen
| | Mike Bloomfield Super Session CD (1968) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Speak Easy
$6.75 A surprise best-seller when it was first released, this mostly improvised pairing of singer/keyboardist/producer Al Kooper with two major guitar heroes of the day sounds fascinating all these years later precisely because of the distance of time--nobody makes records like this any more. The material runs the gamut from folk pop (covers of Donovan and Dylan), to blues ("Albert's Shuffle," "You Don't Love Me"), to heady jams ("His Holy Modal Majesty"), to big-band jazz ("Harvey's Tune").
All the tunes make effective templates for the kind off-the-cuff music-making that in less ...
| | Ray LaMontagne Trouble CD (2004)
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$9.69 Every once in a while a singer/songwriter comes down the pike in ...
| | The Ultimate Bee Gees CDs (2009)
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| | Four Freshmen Voices In Love/Love Lost CD (1998)
Speak Easy
$14.25
| | Magazine Where The Power Is CD (2000) (Import) United Kingdom
Speak Easy
$7.59
| | Knockout Drops Killed By The Lights CD (2003)
Speak Easy
$10.15
| | Refused Songs To Fan The Flames Of Discontent CD (1996) Reissue
Speak Easy
$9.99 The second full-length ...
| | City Boy Anthology CD (2001)
Speak Easy
$12.25 One of the great unsung bands of the 1970s, City Boy released six albums with enough potential hit material to make them stars, but for whatever reason they've become a mere afterthought in the annals of rock & roll. Perhaps the failure to market and promote them adequately or simply being overshadowed by their peers rendered them virtually impotent. Their brand of danceable art-pop combined the melodic hooks of Electric Light Orchestra, Sparks' sarcasm, ...
| | Andy Burch Hard Way CD (2008)
Speak Easy
$10.15 Andrew Burch is an actor turned songwriter, from Taradale. His raw and untapped creativity has been uncompromisingly explored over the past 3 years, which he spent in Melbourne, riding the train and opening his eyes. The Hard Way is his debut release as an independent artist, which is no mean feat, in a fickle and fantastical industry that preys upon the unwary and the impressionable. We are confident that it shall not be his only foray into the music industry. Andrew has a familiarity with the thespians of Hawkes Bay, New Zealand, who may remember him from such Napier Operatic Society productions as… well, there were many, but Blood Brothers (2001) and Sweeney Todd (2000) are fondly remembered. He learned to engage an audience on the local stages, and to love the result. As a teen, he found localized rock n roll expression with the late 90’s Progressive Metal band, Trauma, in which he gallivanted as the often-topless front man. These days his top stays on. Trauma in its hey-day was an experimental- and energetic act, that gained a popular following playing at “the State of It” and various bars of the day. At 10 years old Andrew can remember, “Spying out an old nylon stringed guitar.” His Mum’s, and he picked it up. He has never been without one since. “I had two lessons from a well-known local teacher when I was 14, but I never went back…Ha ….I probably should’ve”. Proud to be a self-taught guitarist, his only real lessons came in the form of jamming, staying up all night with experienced players, in NZ, and in Melbourne.His theatrical background is evident throughout The Hard Way, lyrically, and in the characterization of his voice. “I’m writing about myself, my surroundings, the situations I’m in, relationships…that sort of stuff.” The lyrics contain an element of storytelling, and the characters in the songs ask listeners to pay attention. “I’m probably not gonna write stuff like don’t cha wish ya girlfriend was hot like me? Because, to be honest, that is not going to help anybody do anything.” He believes that musicians and songwriters who are fortunate enough to make it, have a responsibility to be intelligent about the content ...
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