| | Markus Schulz Coldharbour Sessions 2004 CD - Import Markus Schulz Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $24.29 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
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Coldharbour Lane in the Brixton section of London is where Markus Schulz made his home for two years and honed his mixing craft, forging the foundations of a style all his own. This double disc set is the result of his toils, inspired by that important period of his life. Each artist that contributes to the mix is unique and literally comes from the streets and each is a major talent in the offering. Schulz achieves what very few have; a consistent, fluid and pleasing mix that turns heads and gets people off their feet and peers wanting to find the individual talents for themselves. Coldharbour Sessions 2004 Music Markus Schulz Coldharbour Sessions 2004 Songs | 1. | Whirlpool - Under The Sun |
| Coldharbour Sessions 2004 Music Review Purchase Coldharbour Sessions 2004 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | George Acosta Am Edition CD (2001)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$12.95 This is a continuous in-the-mix CD compiled and mixed by DJ George Acosta.
Following the success of his inaugural mix for Ultra, Awake, George Acosta returned a year later in early 2001 with not one but two mix albums: Release: AM Edition and PM Edition. Both of the similar mixes find the Miami trance DJ throwing down the sort of intense Euro-trance that was beginning to peak in popularity among stateside clubgoers during this time. The Release: AM Edition mix features several of Acosta's own productions: the two-minute "Dark Intro," a brief ...
| | George Acosta PM Edition CD (2001)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$13.29 This is a continuous in-the-mix CD compiled and mixed by DJ George Acosta.
Following the success of his inaugural mix for Ultra, Awake, George Acosta returned a year later in early 2001 with not one ...
| | Armin Van Buuren State Of Trance 2004 CDs (2004)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$15.85
| | Armin Van Buuren State Of Trance 2005 CDs (2005)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$15.05
| | Markus Schulz Without You Near CD (2005)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$14.25 Photographer: Diana Vidal.
| | Thrillseekers Nightmusic Volume 1 CDs (2006)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$14.29 The Thrillseekers NIGHTMUSIC VOLUME 1 is a hefty dose of pulsing, palatable trance-groove electronica. ...
| | Various Artists Sounds of Christmas CDs (1995)
$20.08  | | Glenn Medeiros Sweet Island Music CD (1995)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$11.15 Recorded at Audio Resource, Honolulu, Hawaii.
Personnel: ...
| | Richard Rossbach Chill Out In Hawaii CD (2004)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$34.89
| | Bob Marley Original Cuts CD (2004) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$8.79 Bob Marley & the Wailers' late-'60s/early-'70s recordings have been repackaged a million times over, which makes Original Cuts -- yet another repackaging of those pre-Island recordings -- unnecessary upon first glance. Chances are, if you're a big fan you'll already have some if not most of these early recordings in your collection somewhere, whether spread out across a few stray compilations or rounded up in the three-disc, all-encompassing Grooving Kingston 12 collection. Which is precisely why the single-disc Original Cuts is so welcome, especially for casual consumers: it gathers together, plainly and simply, only the best-known of Marley & the Wailers' early work -- songs like "Stir It Up," "Concrete Jungle," "Lively Up Yourself," and "Kaya" that they would later re-record and popularize on their mid-'70s albums for Island/Tuff Gong. Granted, these aren't necessarily the "best of" those early years -- there's practically nothing here from the excellent Soul Rebels album, for instance -- but these are the most well-known songs. For this reason, Original Cuts is especially curious for anyone who is familiar with -- and only with -- the albums Marley & the Wailers cut for Island. These are the original cuts, to quote the album's title, and they're all great songs, albeit rough and primitive at this point in time (especially the ten dubby "versions" compiled here). This is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the early work of ...
| | Jun Shibata Untitled CD (2005) (Import) Import
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$48.59
| | Trouble Nobody Laughs Anymore CD (1998)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$12.45
| | L'Skadrille Nos Vies CD (2006) (Import) Import; Argentina
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$23.65
| | Spacesex:Mixed By Claude Challe & Jea CD (2007) (Import) Import; Limited Edition
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$21.99 2007 masterpiece once more from French tastemaker Claude Challe (Buddha Bar, Les Bains Douches) ...
| | Kabale Und Liebe CD (2007) (Import)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$19.69
| | Bonnie Tyler Faster Than The Speed Of Night CD (1983)
Coldharbour Sessions 2004
$5.95 Although she had earned worldwide fame in 1978 with "It's a Heartache," Bonnie Tyler had trouble building on that success looked as if she were doomed to one-hit wonder status by the early 1980s. However, she returned to prominence in 1983 with Faster Than Speed of the Night, a bombastic opus that took her gift for heartbroken balladry to epic heights. The key to the this album's success is the production and writing chops of Jim Steinman. He applies the same gothic operatic touch that made his work with Meat Loaf so captivating (and successful), wrapping the songs in atmospheric, all-stops-out arrangements that blend drama and power chords in equal measure. The combination of Steinman's cinematic production style with Tyler's smoky vocals made Faster Than the Speed of Night her most successful album. It also spawned a huge hit single in "Total Eclipse of the Heart," an epic ballad about longing for a lost love that starts as a quiet piano-led piece and builds into a gargantuan production built on an equal balance of power chords and thick choral vocals. The title track, a romantic rocker that blends lighting-fast piano runs with metallic guitar soloing from Rick Derringer, also got a decent amount of radio play. The remainder of the album has Tyler turning her attention to cover versions, including a Phil Spector-styled remake of Bryan Adams' "Straight From the Heart" and a radically rearranged version of "Have You Ever Seen the Rain?" that transforms the song into an arena rock tune built on a complex, classical-styled piano riff from Roy Bittan. The standout among the cover versions is "Tears," a heart-tugging power ballad that Tyler performs as a duet with its author, Frankie Miller. Since Miller's gruff voice is close in style to Tyler's, their duet has a special chemistry and they milk the song for every drop of drama it has to offer. This combination of bombast and melodrama could have worn thin quickly, but Steinman keeps things moving smoothly by carefully pacing all the songs and throwing in odd, ear-catching elements to ...
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