| | Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al CD Violin Concertos For Children 2 CDS
(1 Customer Review)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al Music | List Price | $19.98 (You save $4.09) | | Label | Dux Records | | All Time Sales Rank | 4197  | | CD Universe Part number | 6342591 | | Catalog number | 169 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Sep 30, 2003 | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo |
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al Classical Review Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al Songs Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al Music Composers on Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al CD : Charles-A. de Beriot, Marius Casadesus, Franz Joseph Haydn, Rene Ortmans, Friedrich Seitz, Giovanni Battista Viotti, Antonio Vivaldi Genres on Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al CD : 20th Century Period, Baroque Period, Classical Period, Concerto, Romantic Period Performers on Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al CD : E. Jarszewska-Kordykiewicz, Barolomiej Niziol, Krzysztof Podejko, Ella Susmanek
Purchase Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Concertos From My Childhood / Perlman, Foster, Et Al CD (1999)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$12.25
| | Violin Concertos For Children 1 Violin Concertos For Children Vol 1 / Gadzina, Et Al CD (2003)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$15.49
| | All The Pretty Horses CD (2001) Original Soundtrack
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$8.99 Original score by Marty Stewart, Kristin Wilkinson, Larry Paxton. Sure, the movie was no Sling Blade, even if directed by the one and only Billy Bob Thornton. But let's face it, they took two hours outta the thing! All the griping aside, the score, composed and performed by country music renaissance man Marty Stuart -- and his collaborating band members Kristin Wilkinson and Larry Paxton -- is something else completely. Comprised of 23 tracks, Stuart's score does sound like soundtrack music, but no matter. He and his sextet have taken the drama of the film's text and created an aural theater of the American West. At the heart of each theme is a core of mandolin, viola, bass, guitar, accordion, piano, and percussion. Orchestrations ride ambiently in the background, highlighting tension and drama. In "Edge of the World," cornets play at the music's outermost edge, hinting ...
| | Christmas Festival With Arthur Fiedler & The Boston Pops CD (1990)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$6.09
| | Martha Argerich Collection, Vol 2 - The Concerto Recordings CDs (2009) Remastered; Box Set
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$25.19 | | Very Best Of The Classics IV CD (1988)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$8.85
| | Collegium Regale Carry Me Home: Folksongs From Around The World CD (2001) (Import)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$16.39
| | Elgar: Symphony No 3 / Davis, Lso CD (2002) Complete
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$10.15 Sir Colin Davis
| | Regine Crespin Legend - Wagner, Berlioz: Opera Arias / Crespin CD (2005) Bonus DVD
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$17.35
| | Chopin Klavierwerke CD (2009) (Import)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$34.29
| | Stephen Combs Early Scriabin CD (2007) (Import) Import; Reissued
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$9.09 | | Glenn Gould Bach: Six Sonatas For Violin & Har CD (2007)
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$12.59 | | Members Uprhythm, Downbeat CD (1982) (Import) Import; Canada
Violin Concertos For Children Vol 2 / Podejko, Niziol, Et Al
$36.79 The punk-orthodoxy view of the Members is that after a string of promising reggae-tinged singles, the septet released one fine album in 1979's At the Chelsea Nightclub, then lost the plot completely with the follow-up, 1980: The Choice Is Yours, after which they're ignored with an embarrassed throat-clearing. In point of fact, however, the Members rebounded after their second album (which itself is actually not nearly as bad as many would have you believe, sort of the Members' own version of Sandinista! in its appealing looseness and lack of consistent focus) by ridding themselves of any lingering punk associations and going for a complete sonic makeover. The band joined up with producer Martin Rushent (Human League, Altered Images, the Go-Go's), who was a master of making unpromisingly non-commercial bands have big shiny hit records without losing their souls in the process. Rushent nailed it immediately with the Members, concocting the utterly delightful "Working Girl." A mixture of snarky lyrics about the joys of freeloading and a genuinely transcendent chorus, "Working Girl" is a classic '80s pop single and -- despite the protestations of the punker than thou -- easily the best thing the Members ever did. Yes, including "Solitary Confinement." Sadly, the rest of Uprhythm Downbeat doesn't reach the same heights, but the good outweighs the bad, including an inspired reggae version of Kraftwerk's "The Model," the self-celebrating "The Family" and "Boys Like Us," and another minor hit, "Going West." ~ Stewart Mason The punk-orthodoxy view of the Members is that after a string of promising reggae-tinged singles, the septet released one fine album in 1979's At the Chelsea Nightclub, then lost the plot completely with the follow-up, 1980: The Choice Is Yours, after which they're ignored with an embarrassed throat-clearing. In point of fact, however, the Members rebounded after their second album (which itself is actually not nearly as bad as many would have you believe, sort of the Members' own version of Sandinista! in its appealing looseness and lack of consistent focus) by ridding themselves of any lingering punk associations and going for a complete sonic makeover. The band joined up with producer Martin Rushent (Human League, Altered Images, the Go-Go's), who was a master of making unpromisingly non-commercial bands have big shiny hit records without losing their souls in the process. Rushent nailed it immediately with the Members, concocting the utterly delightful "Working Girl." A mixture of snarky lyrics about the joys ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|