| | Buddy Holly Chirping Crickets CD Buddy Holly Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
1957 Debut Album Remastered W/ 4 Bonus Tracks. Buddy Holly Chirping Crickets Songs | 1. | Oh Boy! | |
| 2. | Not Fade Away | |
| 3. | You've Got Love | |
| 4. | Maybe Baby | |
| 5. | It's Too Late | |
| 6. | Tell Me How | |
| 7. | That'll Be The Day | |
| 8. | I'm Looking For Someone To Love | |
| 9. | An Empty Cup (And A Broken Date) | |
| 10. | Send Me Some Lovin' | |
| 11. | Last Night | |
| 12. | Rock Me My Baby | |
| Chirping Crickets Music Review Purchase Chirping Crickets CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Chuck Berry After School Session (1st LP) CD (1957) Remastered
Chirping Crickets album
$7.89 Featuring a motley assortment of tunes recorded in 1955 and 1956, Chuck Berry's first Chess LP (released in 1957) could have also been titled THE MANY MOODS OF BERRY. Featuring three superior instrumentals ("Deep Feeling," ...
| | Bill Haley Rock Around The Clock (1st LP) CD (1956) Remastered
Chirping Crickets CD music
$6.49 Rock Around the Clock was basically the Shake, Rattle & Roll 10" disc with four fine 1955 vintage numbers -- "Two Hound Dogs," "Razzle Dazzle," "Rock-a-Beatin' Boogie," and "Burn That Candle" -- added on. Frannie Beecher's break on "Razzle Dazzle" was worth the price of the platter (probably all of four dollars, albeit in 1956 dollars, ...
| | Buddy Holly CD (1958) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Chirping Crickets music CDs
$6.49 This 1958 release is one of the first indisputably great rock albums. Holly's range here still impresses; he's equally fluent with rockabilly (or at least, his own highly original take on it, as witness "Rave On" and "I'm Gonna Love You, Too"), R&B (a cover of Little Richard's "Ready Teddy" that has, as they used to say, the real gone spirit), and even a sort of riff-driven folk rock ("Words ...
| | Electric Light Orchestra A New World Record - Expanded Edition CD (1976) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Chirping Crickets songs
$7.59 Also available in a 3-pack with FACE THE MUSIC and DISCOVERY.
1976's A NEW WORLD RECORD is both a classic of commercial '70s pop and an archetypal ELO album. From the outer-space synths and rich orchestrations that open the album to Jeff Lynne's meticulous production and Beatlesque melodies, A NEW WORLD RECORD is magnificent ear candy. Both ambitious enough to appeal to "serious" rock fans and ultra-catchy enough to sound terrific on Top 40 radio (the plaintively gorgeous, McCartney-like "Telephone Line" and the anthemic "Livin' Thing" were well-deserved smashes), ELO was one of the few '70s bands whose appeal covered both the FM and AM spectrums. The album even resurrects "Do Ya," a classic single by Lynne's former band, the Move, in a splashy new version.
The next ELO album, 1977's elaborate double-album OUT OF THIS WORLD, was probably the band's commercial high point, but A NEW WORLD RECORD is the group's artistic high-water mark.
Jeff Lynne reportedly regards this album and its follow-up, Out of the Blue, as the high points in the band's history. One might be better off opting for A New World Record over its successor, however, as a more modest-sized creation chock full of superb songs ...
| | Elton John CDs (1970) Deluxe Edition
Chirping Crickets album
$19.59 Elton John's second album was his first to be released in the U.S., and the difference between it and its predecessor, EMPTY SKY, is palpable and immediate. ELTON JOHN opens with "Your Song," a halting ballad that is one of the most moving love songs in the modern pop canon. The album also marks John's fruitful association with Gus Dudgeon and arranger Paul Buckmaster (who'd previously collaborated on David Bowie's "Space Oddity"). The team came up with a spare orchestral sound that surrounds the singer and his piano with dashes of both classical and rock guitar, synthesizers, carefully arranged drums, and searing strings.
This wasn't all-out pop yet, but rather a striking and singular ...
| | Doors Soft Parade CD (1969) Gold; Remastered
Chirping Crickets CD music
$16.02 Dismissed by the benighted as the Doors' "pop album," SOFT PARADE is one of the band's most adventurous recordings, utilizing strings and horns without resorting to schlocky over-production and moving far beyond their blues roots. Morrison was fully into his shaman phase by 1969, and his obsession with that image is reflected in the proselytizing air of "Tell All the People," and of course "Shaman's Blues." The album's biggest hit "Touch Me," while easily the group's most radio-friendly offering, is a pop classic that ranks among the great '60s AM radio tunes. "Wild Child" is a brief return to the blues-rock of yore, but the title track is a sophisticated, extended piece that moves through several different moods and textures, full of the elliptical, poetic lyrics that were Morrison's trademark.
The weakest studio album recorded ...
| | Big Bad Voodoo Daddy CD (1994)
Chirping Crickets music CDs
$13.85
| | Mazinga Phaser Dissatisfied Customers Of Hallucination CD (2000)
Chirping Crickets songs
$11.65
| | David Whitaker Songbook CD (2004) (Import) France
Chirping Crickets album
$14.95
| | Daevid Allen Live In Chicago CD (2006)
Chirping Crickets CD music
$15.55
| | Will Young Keep On CD (2006) (Import) Sweden
Chirping Crickets music CDs
$12.65 Will Young was growing up. It had been three years since his unexpected win on the first season of Pop Idol and even at the time of his second album, Friday's Child, he had stated his intention to distance himself from the moniker of being a TV reality show winner, especially as the careers of such winners tended to be notoriously short. So there he was on the cover of his third album, Keep On, looking remarkably like the actor Todd Carty, who played the weatherbeaten character of Mark Fowler on BBC-TVs Eastenders. On Keep On, Young was mature enough to write (or at least co-write) most of the tracks, including the first two, "Keep On" and "Switch It On," both quite funky numbers. Then came the album's first ballad, "All Time Love," every bit as tuneful as "Anything Is Possible" or "Evergreen," his debut single and still the best-selling single of the 21st century. There was a mixture of styles on Keep On, from the salsa, holiday-inspired "Happiness" to the Justin Timberlake pastiche of "Ain't Such a Bad Place to Be," on which even the Indian-style intro worked ...
| | Daniel Alejo Sera CD (2006)
Chirping Crickets songs
$13.95
| | Captain Beefheart Mirror Man Sessions CD (1999)
Chirping Crickets album
$6.05 Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band: Captain Beefheart (vocals, harmonica); Alex St. Caire Snoufer, Antennae Jimmy Simmons (guitar); Jerry Handsley (bass); John "Drumbo" French (drums).
Recorded in Los Angeles, California in 1965. Originally released on Performance (156). Includes liner notes by John Platt ...
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