| | Best Of A Taste Of Honey CD - Import Taste Of Honey Discography of CDs
A Taste of Honey are remembered for their disco classics on BEST OF A TASTE OF HONEY.
Toshiba. Best Of A Taste Of Honey Music Best Of A Taste Of Honey Songs | 1. | Boogie Oogie Oogie | |
| 2. | Sukiyaki  | |
| 3. | Rescue Me | |
| 4. | Do It Good | |
| 5. | She's a Dancer | |
| 6. | World Spin | |
| 7. | Discon Dancin' | |
| 8. | Sky High | |
| 9. | I Love You | $0.99 | |
| 10. | Take the Boogae or Leave It | |
| 11. | Let's Begin | |
| 12. | Ain't Nothin' But a Party | |
| 13. | Boogie Oogie Oogie - (12'' Remix) | |
| Best Of A Taste Of Honey Review
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Purchase Best Of A Taste Of Honey CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Voyage Let's Fly Away CD (1993)
Best Of A Taste Of Honey album
$11.99
| | Cerrone's Paradise CD (1977) (Import) Import; Canada
Best Of A Taste Of Honey CD music
$18.39 Over the years, the sophomore curse has plagued many talented artists, who showed considerable promise on their debut albums ...
| | Delegation Promise Of Love +2 CD (2006) (Import)
Best Of A Taste Of Honey music CDs
$40.75
| | Kenny Loggins Nightwatch CD (1978) Japan
Best Of A Taste Of Honey songs
$24.45 Also available in a 3-pack with CELEBRATE ME HOME and KEEP THE FIRE.
NIGHTWATCH presents nine tracks from singer-songwriter Kenny Loggin's heyday, including the ballad "Whenever I Call You "Friend" and the Doobie Brothers' cover "What a Fool Believes."
Disregard the self-styled epic title track, a seven-and-half-minute indulgence that may be a bid for artistic credibility yet leads nowhere and doesn't have much to do with what follows. Nightwatch is, by and large, a more focused affair than his first. Granted, his first holds a mood better, a slice of great late '70s soft rock, but this has more pep and hooks, from the sprightly "Easy Drive" to a cover of Billy Joe Royal's "Down in the Boondocks" or, especially, the warm Stevie Nicks duet "Whenever I Call You Friend," which brought Loggins his first solo hit. These signal that this rocks a bit harder than its predecessor, which is true -- while ...
| | Wild Cherry Super Hits CD (2002) Bonus Tracks; Japan
Best Of A Taste Of Honey album
$24.65 "Play That Funky Music" is the highlight of this ...
| | Average White Band Shine CD (1980) (Import) Japan; Remastered; Mini LP Sleeve
Best Of A Taste Of Honey CD music
$39.19
| | Abdullah Ibrahim Knysna Blue CD (1993)
Best Of A Taste Of Honey music CDs
$10.89
| | Trulla Express Y Vuelve...Vol. 2 CD (1995)
Best Of A Taste Of Honey songs
$9.59
| | Flin Flon Chicoutimi CD (2002)
Best Of A Taste Of Honey album
$9.55
| | R&B/Hip Hop Party Mix CD (2005) (Import) Import; Japan
Best Of A Taste Of Honey CD music
$35.49
| | Claudio Zoli Zoli Clube CD (2005) Import
Best Of A Taste Of Honey music CDs
$22.09
| | Buddy Defranco Buddy De Franco & The Oscar Peterson Quartet CD (2007) (Import)
Best Of A Taste Of Honey songs
$13.99
| | Welsh Rare Beat V.2 CD (2007) (Import) United Kingdom
Best Of A Taste Of Honey album
$21.95 It's the second volume that's always the test of an anthology series. You could make a good single disc out of just about any musical sub-subgenre, no matter how microscopic. So that Welsh Rare Beat, Vol. 2, the follow-up to Super Furry Animals leader Gruff Rhys' highly enjoyable 2005 anthology of vintage Welsh-language singles from the '60s and early '70s, is just about its equal is quite heartening: there may be yet more to come. Of course, one shouldn't be surprised: Great Britain as a whole produced a seemingly inexhaustible supply of toe-tapping 45s between the death of trad jazz and the birth of punk, and someone could no doubt make an equally compelling set of 22 tracks by bands hailing from, say, the Upper Hebrides. It's the pleasantly alien sound of the Welsh language that makes these songs sound so odd at first listen: Y Diliau '72's "Ffair Ynys Hir," a Welsh-language version of the trad folk standard "Scarborough Fair," opens the album with just enough of a point of comparison to make things linguistically easy, but after that, all bets are off. What becomes immediately obvious upon listening to these tracks is that, had most of them been recorded in English, they would already be quite well known to obscurity hunters. For example, Heather Jones' "Can O Dristwch" and "Can I Janis" both trot along quite perkily, like vintage pieces of Greenaway/Cook style AM radio pop circa 1971. After a peculiar spoken introduction, "Shw' Mae? Shw' Mae?" by Meic Stevens (widely hailed as the Paul McCartney of Welsh pop, and deservedly so) is a fine little nugget of ear candy. Sandy Denny-style folk with a stark female voice and acoustic guitar (Eleri Llwyd's "Cariad Cyntaf"), cool, echoey folk-rock (Galwad y Mynydd's "Niwi y Mor"), sugary sweet bubblegum (Sidan's gloriously sunshiny "Cymylau" and the more glammy, ABBA-like strut of Eleri Llwyd's "Dawns," quite a departure from her more staid earlier song) and even a cool, easy listening instrumental (AD 73's "Higher and Higher") are to be found here, making Welsh Rare Beat, Vol. 2 like an impressively concise potted history of most of the teeny bopper pop trends of the time and place. The fairly thorough liner notes do a good job of placing the songs in their proper cultural context, but just listening is enough: this is hugely enjoyable stuff not just for historians and obscurantists, but for good old-fashioned '70s pop fans ...
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