| | Pitchshifter Desensitized CD - Import Pitchshifter Discography of CDs
Pitchshifter Desensitized Songs Desensitized Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Pitchshifter Desensitized CD - Import. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Desensitized CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Trans-Siberian Orchestra Night Castle CDs (2009)
Desensitized
$11.35
| | W A S P Babylon CD (2009) (Import) United Kingdom
Desensitized
$15.45
| | Michael Buble Crazy Love CD (2009)
Desensitized
$14.49 Buoyed by the popularity of the hit contemporary pop ballad "Home," singer Michael Bublé's 2005 album, IT'S TIME, clearly positioned the vocalist as the preeminent neo-crooner of his generation. Easily the singer's most stylistically wide-ranging album so far, 2009's CRAZY LOVE is also one of his brightest, poppiest, and most fun. Bublé kicks things off with the theatrical, epic ballad "Cry ...
| | Bob Dylan Christmas In The Heart CD (2009)
Desensitized
$12.85 After the initial shock fades, the existence of CHRISTMAS IN THE HEART seems perhaps inevitable. After all, the thing Bob Dylan loves most of all are songs that are handed down from generation to generation, songs that are part of the American fabric, songs so common they never seem to have been written. These are the songs Dylan ...
| | Pink Martini Splendor In The Grass CD (2009) Digipak
Desensitized
$13.39 Pink Martini follow the around-the-world-in-a-dozen-songs thrills of HEY EUGENE! with SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS, a mellower, simpler set of small pleasures. These are relative terms, however; the group's music is still well-traveled, with China Forbes singing in five languages (English, Spanish, Neapolitan, French, and Italian) instead of the six or so on EUGENE!. However, Pink Martini opt for a more unified sound here, one that draws on the more straightforward lounge-pop of their debut, SYMPATHIQUE, and the mellowness ...
| | Bad Lieutenant Never Cry Another Tear CD (2009)
Desensitized
$8.79
| | Warren Storm Best Of The Rest CD (2002)
Desensitized
$17.09 Contains 12 tracks.
Highs: Storm's Fifties success was not a fluke. From the opening swampy swagger of his rendition of "Sweet Little Sixteen," the rock classic Chuck Berry made famous, it's quite obvious that Storm is a professional through and through, with plenty of electric instrumentation and soulful, bluesy vocals to instantaneously bring back thoughts of sock hops and jitterbugs. "Tear It Up" is another ...
| | Landing Passages Through CD (2003)
Desensitized
$12.49 Passages Through isn't ...
| | Fat Water CD (1969) (Import) United Kingdom
Desensitized
$17.79
| | up the dose Sects CD (2004)
Desensitized
$9.35
| | Ken Davis Spa CD (2005) (Import)
Desensitized
$19.99
| | Maginot Line Paris Burning CD (2003) Import
Desensitized
$10.65
| | Ronnie JJB Music Jazz After Midnight CD (2003)
Desensitized
$8.39
| | By Phar The Dopest Hajijanai CD (2006) (Import)
$15.69 | | Damned Damned Damned CDs (1977) (Import) Bonus CD; England; Germany
Desensitized
$46.15 30th Anniversary Expanded Edition, features 2 bonus discs of material.
Released in early 1977, DAMNED DAMNED DAMNED was one of the first punk albums issued and it remains a certified punk classic. Unlike the work of such contemporaries as the Adverts and Slaughter and the Dogs, this stunning debut sounds as fresh and vital today as it did in 1977. The album blasts off with the searing "Neat Neat Neat," a raging slab of buzzsaw guitars, crashing drums, and the sneering vocals of Dave Vanian that ranks among the 20 best punk songs of the era.
Never as political as the Sex Pistols or the Clash, the Damned were the original cartoon punks, merrily ripping through such cheerful songs as "Born to Kill," "Stab Your Back," and "Fish" with reckless abandon, playing punk rock for the simple joy of making loud, aggressive music. Other highlights include the group's anthemic hit single, "New Rose," a pounding track that's powered by a monster riff from guitarist Brian James, and a swell rendition of the Stooges' "I Feel Alright." Produced by Nick Lowe (who allegedly sped up the original tapes to give the Damned a "punkier" sound), DAMNED DAMNED DAMNED is essential for any fan of UK or West Coast punk.
If you like punk rock at all, you pretty much have to have a soft spot for the Damned's epochal 1976 debut album Damned Damned Damned, one of the masterstroke releases of the first wave of British punk which still sounds fresh, exciting and brilliantly snotty three decades after it was released. But if you love Damned Damned Damned, well, this remastered and lavishly expanded edition will bring a broken-toothed grin to your face in no time flat. This three-disc set (yes, three discs!) opens with the original album, which seems to have hardly dated a bit. For all the group's manic energy, the playing is sharp and muscular, Dave Vanian's vocals are powerful enough to make his histrionics work, Rat Scabies' drumming holds the band tight, Captain Sensible's bass provides a solid foundation for the melodies and Brian James' guitar wails with primitive force. The songs still communicate, and the band's lack of an upfront political or social agenda means these songs aren't chained to their era the way the early Clash, Sex Pistols or Stiff Little Fingers discs are, great as they may be. Disc two serves up 26 demos, B-sides, non-LP single tracks and radio recordings, which equals nearly everything the band recorded during their first year of operations. The two John Peel sessions and a ten-song BBC live concert will delight anyone with a fondness for the band's first era, and you may want to give "Singalong Scabies" ("Stab Yor Back" minus its vocal track) a spin at your next karaoke party. And Disc three features a lo-fi recording of one of the Damned's first public gigs, a set recorded in London during the 100 Club's first Punk Rock ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|