| | Vince Jones It All Ends Up In Tears CD Vince Jones Discography of CDs
Reissue of 1998 album from Australia's leading jazzvocalist who also plays the trumpet. Intuition. 2003. It All Ends Up In Tears Music Vince Jones It All Ends Up In Tears Songs | 1. | If You're Going to the City |
| 2. | Jettison |
| 3. | Five O'Clock in the Morning |
| 4. | Budgie |
| 5. | You Don't Know What Love Is |
| 6. | Rainbow Cake |
| 7. | Comes Love |
| 8. | But Beautiful |
| 9. | Sweet Defeat, A |
| 10. | Circle in the Square |
| 11. | It All Ends up in Tears |
| It All Ends Up In Tears Review
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Purchase It All Ends Up In Tears CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Euge Groove Sunday Morning CD (2009)
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| | Dave Koz Smooth Jazz Christmas CD (2001)
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| | Vince Guaraldi Charlie Brown Christmas CD (1977)
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$11.65 The fourth of four CD reissues taken from Art Pepper's three nights at the Village Vanguard in July 1977, as with the other releases, adds one selection ("Scrapple from the Apple") to the music of the original LP; all of the performances on this and the other sets have since been made available as part of ...
| | Vijay Iyer Historicity CD (2010) Digipak
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| | Miles Davis In A Silent Way CD (1969) Remastered; Deluxe Edition
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$6.79 John McLaughlin (electric guitar); Dave Holland (bass); Tony Williams (drums).
With IN A SILENT WAY, the elements of popular music, blues and electronics that had been implicit in Miles Davis' previous recordings now came center stage, and the trumpeter never looked back ...
| | Very Best Of Julie London CDs (2006)
It All Ends Up In Tears CD music
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| | Holding Up Half The Sky: Voices Of African Women CD (1997)
It All Ends Up In Tears music CDs
$14.45 Contains three previously released titles: HOLDING UP HALF THE SKY: VOICES OF AFRICAN WOMEN, HOLDING UP HALF THE SKY: VOICES OF CELTIC WOMEN, and HOLDING UP HALF THE SKY: WOMEN IN REGGAE: ROOTS DAUGHTERS, and one additional title: HOLDING UP HALF THE SKY: VOICES OF ASIAN WOMEN.
As a compilation of Pan-African works, this compilation from Shanachie is amazingly thorough. Nearly all of the regions and musical styles of Africa are represented (as opposed to the usual style of just West African griot songs, or South African vocals, or Kenyan melodies, or soukous, etc.). The Mahotella Queens begin the album with a stunning display of the South African township style. They're followed by pop-funkster ...
| | Robert Lamm Subtlety & Passion CD (2003) (Import) United Kingdom
It All Ends Up In Tears songs
$16.39 When prominent members of successful bands make solo albums, they tend to take one of two approaches: either they try to avoid sounding like the parent groups, or they don't. Robert Lamm, keyboardist and singer with Chicago, for the most part went the former route with his first three solo albums, and there was much validity to that, if only because the band's most identifiable style -- its horn sound -- was played by others. Lamm did bring his familiar strengths to his solo albums, particularly his direct, personal way with lyrics and his eclectic musical taste. But usually you wouldn't mistake a track from one of those albums for a Chicago recording. His fourth album, Subtlety & Passion, is a different story. Most of the tracks on it would fit easily onto a Chicago album, especially one of the band's LPs from the mid-'70s. One reason for this may be that some of the material originally was earmarked for a new Chicago album that did not see release. (Most of the bandmembers play on this disc.) But also, Lamm is deliberately looking back over his career, and he is using the Chicago style, complete with horns, to do so. "Another Sunday" could be a continuation of the Chicago hit "Saturday in the Park," "You Never Know the Story" laments the 1978 death of Chicago guitarist Terry Kath, and "Intensity" actually features Kath's guitar playing. As usual, Lamm trenchantly comments on the world around him in songs like "It's Always Something" and "Gimme Gimme" (the latter criticizing the entertainment industry's mania for giving itself awards), as he has before. And, in what should delight Chicago fans, he turns in songs that sound like the band in its early prime, notably leadoff track "I Could Tell You Secrets" and "The Mystery of Moonlight," either of which could have been a major hit if released in the '70s. But that is not to say that the album sounds dated. Rather, Lamm, who has sometimes used his solo albums to keep up with contemporary pop sounds, this time has made an album in his classic style. "Subtlety and passion have fallen out of fashion," he sings, but they remain his artistic goals, goals reached on the album of that name. ~ William Ruhlmann
THIS IS THE DEFINITIVE ROBERT LAMM CD. In the beginning, there was Chicago Transit Authority, with it's ...
| | Abdullah Ibrahim African Suite CD (1999)
It All Ends Up In Tears album
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| | Stephen Pollock So Near, So Far CD (2005) (Import)
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| | Susan Bednar-Haynes Reminiscing Moments CD (2004)
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| | Takehiro Honda Ease CD (1993) Japan; 24 Bit Remastered; Mini LP Sleeve
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| | Rikters CD (2009)
It All Ends Up In Tears album
$12.69 The Rikters are lucky to be alive.Doug was hit by lightning. Riley had a building collapse underneath him. Owen once jumped from a moving train.The band itself almost ceased to exist after losing a founding member back in 2007. Doug and Riley held auditions for weeks, failing to find a bassist who met their high standards. They were about to call it quits when Owen, who had moved to Chicago a week earlier, responded to their craigslist classified. Even then, Doug, despondent after too many disappointing auditions, told Owen not to bother showing up when he found out the recent NYC transplant didn't have his own car. Owen, after being told to man up by his girlfriend, called Doug back to say "you should really just hear me play." They did, and a little over a year later the reformed Rikters have written a ton of new material, ...
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