| | Talisman Cats And Dogs CD Talisman Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
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Our Price: $37.99 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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Japanese edition of the Swedish metal act's 2003 album, featuring 13 tracks including one bonus track for the Japanese release, 'Time'. King. 2003.
CD contains 1 bonus track. Cats And Dogs Music | List Price | $49.98 (You save $11.99) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Heavy Metal CDs, Rock | | Label | Nexus | | Orig Year | 2003 | | All Time Sales Rank | 262536  | | CD Universe Part number | 5938302 | | Catalog number | 929 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Dec 09, 2003 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Additional Info | Bonus Track; Japan |
Talisman Cats And Dogs Songs | 1. | Skin On Skin |
| 2. | Break It Down |
| 3. | In Make Believe |
| 4. | Love Will Come Again |
| 5. | Outta My Way |
| 6. | Friends To Stranger |
| 7. | Sorry |
| 8. | Trapped |
| 9. | M.O.M. |
| 10. | Wherever, Whenever, Whatever |
| 11. | Lost In the Wasteland |
| 12. | Hell In Paradise |
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| | Steppenwolf/Second CDs (1999) (Import) England; Remastered; United Kingdom
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$18.79 2 LPs on 1 cassette. Both are available separately on CD and cassette.
This reissue of two 1968 recleases by rockers Steppenwolf features "Sookie Sookie," "The Pusher," "Magic Carpet Ride" and the international hit "Born To Be Wild."
The domestic MCA CDs of Steppenwolf's first two albums offered surprisingly good sound quality for 1960s reissues of the late '80s. That must be testament to the sheer power of the master tapes, which overcame most of the limitations of late-'80s digital audio and the usual timidity of the engineers of that era. The music fairly burned, its sheer loudness and impact overpowering even on those early CDs. Beat Goes On's reissue of the two albums in a narrow double-CD package does offer improved fidelity (especially on Steppenwolf the Second), but it won't prove quite as big a revelation as one would expect, except for the discriminating listener. The music is mastered at a higher volume, but the MCA discs were done at a pretty high volume as well -- the big difference, especially on the second album, is the volume and presence of the rhythm instruments; you can practically hear the action on Jerry Edmonton's drum kit on much of the second album, and Rushton Moreve's bass is far better represented on both discs, all of which makes for a more powerful sound. The break on "Magic Carpet Ride" has sort of had its impact restored here, despite 38 years of overexposure, and "Faster Than the Speed of Life" makes for an imposing opener. The first album isn't improved as dramatically, though it is good to hear its blues pieces in their optimum state, and "Born to Be Wild" does have some of that heavy metal thunder. The clarity also presents the group's trademarked distortion in about as sharp relief as anyone is likely to have heard it since the actual recording sessions. The annotation by Sean Egan gives a good account of the group's early history and the more unusual attributes of their music (which, somehow, never earned the respect of the first generation of rock music critics). Perhaps the group was too successful on the charts, and signed to a too shamelessly commercial label (ABC-Dunhill) ever to be taken seriously by those late-'60s rock writers, but as this release showcases, they were a pretty formidable group, given half a chance, and these first two albums sound a lot more engaging and impressive than a lot of other '60s groups' efforts from 1967 and 1968. What's more, between the two albums you get "Born to be Wild," "The Pusher," "Sookie Sookie," and "Magic Carpet Ride," meaning that this package could almost be considered an expanded greatest-hits collection. ~ Bruce Eder & Sean Westergaard
The domestic MCA CDs of Steppenwolf's first two albums offered surprisingly good sound quality for 1960s reissues of the late '80s. That must be testament ...
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| | KRS-One Life CD (2006)
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$13.05 KRS-One has always been a socially conscious rapper, tackling different subjects throughout his career, most of which relate to problems that face many urban dwellers, especially black ones. But in Life, race is an issue he chooses not to tackle; in fact, he makes a point to mention that specifically. "I am hip-hop/I don't speak for blacks," ...
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| | Dave Gleason Just Fall To Press CD (2007)
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$10.29 Dave Gleason's Wasted Days are heavily influenced by the late-'60s and early-'70s country-rock of bands such as the Flying Burrito Brothers and the Byrds (that is, the incarnation of the Byrds fueled by Clarence White). And on Just Fall to Pieces, Gleason and this crew of Californians do a darn good job of approximating their ancestors. The album is rife with ...
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