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Purchase Best Of CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Owl City Ocean Eyes CD (2009)
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$10.19
| | Zac Brown Foundation CD (2008)
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$10.49
| | Fleetwood Mac - The Dance DVD (1997)
Best Of music CDs
$18.95 A 1997 reunion concert of the quintessential members of Fleetwood Mac (Lindsey Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood, Christine McVie, John McVie, and Stevie Nicks) to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the release of their classic, multi-million selling album, "Rumours." Filmed in conjunction with MTV over three nights at a sound stage in Los Angeles, the band performs titles from the album, such as "Don't Stop (Thinking ...
| | U2 No Line On The Horizon CD (2009)
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$10.49 There's no shortage of legendary producers in line to work with music world titans U2; when work with Rick Rubin broke off, Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois stepped in. The resulting NO LINE ON THE HORIZON, 2009's offering from the Irish rockers, continues in the grand U2 tradition, as soaring pop anthems like opening single "Get on Your Boots" pair with experimental melanges like "Tripoli," on a striking album featuring touches of all the albums come before, yet hinting at new worlds for Bono to conquer.
After spending the 1990s experimenting with electronic music and returning to arena-ready rock during the first few years of the 21st century, U2 stakes out territory somewhere between those two points on 2009's NO LINE ON THE HORIZON. Enlisting its go-to production trio of Brian Eno, Daniel Lanois, and Steve Lillywhite, the Irish quartet seems intent on crafting a quirkier companion piece to HOW TO DISMANTLE AN ATOMIC BOMB, and they succeed with restless tracks such as "Get on Your Boots," which sounds like "Vertigo" hijacked by T. Rex, and "Stand Up Comedy," a wiry number that lets the Edge cut loose with barbed guitar lines. Some of most striking songs on HORIZON are the ones that venture farthest from U2's comfort zone, as on the surprisingly weighty title track, a tune that counterbalances its nearly industrial heft with a high-pitched keyboard melody, and, of course, Bono's soaring vocals. Although HORIZON is willfully less accessible than BOMB or ALL THAT YOU CAN'T ...
| | Whitney Houston I Look To You CD (2009)
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$10.69 Despite her star having lost some of its luster in the 2000s, Whitney Houston is still regarded as a benchmark for modern singers of all stripes (from soulful divas to would-be pop idols). Almost seven years in the making, 2009's I LOOK ...
| | John Denver Rocky Mountain Christmas CD (1975)
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$6.09 This 1998 reissue contains 5 bonus tracks (including the previously
unreleased "White Christmas") not included on the original release.
John Denver's music always had a warm, home-spun quality to it, so it isn't surprising that his 1975 holiday effort, Rocky Mountain Christmas, is a wonderfully low-key and friendly Christmas album. Divided between classic carols and new numbers, such as the fine "Aspenglow" and "Christmas for Cowboys," the album is an appealing, pretty record, perfect for late nights by the fireside. The 1998 CD reissue adds five bonus tracks: "Jingle Bells," "White Christmas," "The Music is You," "Perhaps Love," and "Dreamland Express." ~ Rodney Batdorf
Live Recording
Producers: Milton Okun, John Denver, Barney Wycoff, Roger Nichols.
Adapter: John Denver.
Personnel: John Denver (vocals, guitar, 12-string guitar); John Denver (acoustic 6-string guitar, acoustic ...
| | Robert Roth Someone, Somewhere CD (2004)
Best Of music CDs
$9.59 Several years removed from the breakup of one of Seattle's more underrated bands, Truly, singer/guitarist/songwriter Robert Roth returns with his first-ever solo release, 2004's Someone, Somewhere. It turns out that Roth followed the lead of Stevie Wonder and Prince on his solo debut, as he penned everything, played the majority of the instruments, and also produced the album in his own studio -- over the course of a lengthy three-year period. With Roth calling all the shots, Someone, Somewhere retains some of Truly's sonic elements (especially Roth's appreciation of Tom Verlaine and Brian Wilson), but also manages to expand on them -- with standouts including the Flaming Lips-esque title track ...
| | Frantic Flintstones Champagne 4 All! CD (2004) Import
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$15.25
| | Air Supply All The Hits Live CD (2005)
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$5.29
| | Leanie Kaleido Karamelien CD (2008)
Best Of CD music
$20.95
| | Doris Day Best Of CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Best Of music CDs
$19.69
| | Ampersand Can-Can Variety Show CD (2006) (Import)
Best Of songs
$35.49
| | Lucinda Williams West CD (2007) Digipak
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$11.45 Like Billie Holiday, John Lee Hooker, and Kurt Cobain, among others, Lucinda Williams is an artist with that certain difficult-to-define quality, the ability to channel the collective soul through a voice that is intimate, personal, and entirely her own. WEST, Williams's 2007 release, bears all the hallmarks of her best work: excellent songcraft, poetically tough lyrics, and her angel-on-morphine voice. As an album, it is her most consistent and appealing since 1998's CAR WHEELS ON A GRAVEL ROAD.
Williams's seemingly odd choice to work with mainstream pop producer Hal Willner works wonderfully. Willner built the album up from Williams's demo recordings, keeping her original vocals, and creating a sound that shimmers but never loses sight of the music's tough rootsiness. Yet it's Williams's searingly honest songwriting and achingly beautiful performances that make WEST so brilliant. Whether it's gutbucket blues ("Wrap My Head Around That"), bittersweet lilt ("Learning How To Live"), or harrowing confessionals ("Unsuffer Me"), Williams knows how to scrape the bottom of the human heart and put it into ...
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