| | Quant Getting Out CD Quant Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
 |
|
Our Price: $15.05 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
|  |
Live Recording
Personnel: Jonatan Bäckelie, Guida de Palma (vocals).
Quant Getting Out Songs | 1. | Get Off My Line |
| 2. | Tryin' |
| 3. | Self Control |
| 4. | Babu |
| 5. | Chils' N Thrills |
| 6. | Miracle Man |
| 7. | Come and Go |
| 8. | Never Thought That |
| 9. | Getting Up |
| 10. | Revenge |
| Purchase Getting Out CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Stereo Sushi Vol. 2 CDs (2002) (Import) United Kingdom
Getting Out
$25.09 The second in the series of "soulful deep house lounging" doesn't include a wealth of important, individualistic tracks, but many of the inclusions are fine: Jody Watley's languorous vocal on "Saturday Night Experience" begins the first disc with class and the Blaze remix of Ananda Project's "Breaking ...
| | Om Lounge 7 CD (2003)
Getting Out
$10.15 Sink into a beanbag ...
| | Chick Corea To The Stars CD (2004) Digipak
Getting Out
$9.59
| | Gaelle Transient CD (2004)
Getting Out
$12.99
| | Lisa Shaw Cherry CD (2005)
Getting Out
$12.99
|  | | Also Bought |
| Physics Influences CD (2008) (Import) Import
Getting Out
$27.85
| | Cocktail Mix Vol. 2: Martini Madness CD (1996)
Getting Out
$6.95 Certainly the best of Rhino's Cocktail Mix series, focusing on the most dance-oriented aspects of space age pop. This 18-song compilation could be said to stretch the boundaries of that recently coined genre a bit. After all, Mose Allison, Cal Tjader, Brother Jack McDuff, and Pucho & the Latin Soul Brothers were not so much cocktail musicians as respected jazzmen who drew liberally from Latin music, blues, and pop. Mel Tormé (represented by the classic "Comin' Home Baby") and Nancy Wilson were respected "straight" pop vocalists; Quincy Jones and Connie Francis wandered into the playing field with their bossa nova novelties. Ann Margaret, Sergio Mendes, and Walter Wanderley are more the kind of chintzy good-bad acts you'd expect, but it's ...
| | Brett Smiley Breathlessly Brett CD (2003)
Getting Out
$25.05 Brett Smiley was a legend in glam rock circles, but a legend only to those who lived through the times or fanatically dug through old, yellowed copies of Melody Maker, NME, and Disc, seeking to re-create the times. Such is the fate of a singer whose only album was shelved following a disastrous performance of a heavily hyped single. Smiley deserved better, but fate has been kind to him, since his longstanding cult reputation led to the much belated but still celebrated release of his scrapped 1974 album, Breathlessly Brett, on RPM in 2003. Its release was tied into RPM's Lipsmackin' 70s series, which debuted with Velvet Tinmine, a collection of glam and glitter singles forgotten to all but die-hard record collectors. Smiley comfortably fit into this category, of course, and his storied bomb, "Va Va Va Voom," received its CD debut there, whetting the appetite for this disc. Everybody who's heard the collection or the single will know what to expect, and will be delighted with what they get -- a fabulously fey, coyly campy, and smashingly swishy glam pop album; it's Bowie and Bolan filtered through Judy Garland and performed by the prettiest boy to sigh into a microphone in the '70s. These are precisely the ingredients for a cult classic, of course, but it's hardly something that would have burned up the charts, unless it hit at precisely the right moment and was sold to the hilt. Smiley did have Andrew Loog Oldham, the man who sold the world the Rolling Stones in the '60s, behind him, producing his record, pushing his image, and selecting his material. Oldham often had his finger on the pulse of pop currents and his genius was promotion, but he was simply off here. He was a little late on the glam bandwagon, he relied too heavily on Smiley's gorgeous visage, he bizarrely encouraged Smiley to play up MOR and traditional pop links (he covers "Young at Heart," names one original "April in Paris," and adds "Over the Rainbow" to the end of his cover of the Four Tops' "I Can't Help Myself"), and when it didn't sell, he jumped ship immediately.
To be frank, this music minces and swishes so much and has so much old-fashioned theatricality that it's hard to see how it would have been a big hit, no matter how pretty Smiley is or how catchy each of these songs are. But these are all the reasons why Breathlessly Brett is a delight for obsessive glam fans and unrepentant pop record collectors. It's the kind of record where even the bad moments -- and there are undeniably silly patches -- have a kind of absurd charm, such as ending a fizzy, trashy glitter-bubblegum album with "Young at Heart," or how Smiley twists the words of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" to "You got that something/You got that hand." But the real strength of the album is in Smiley's original songs. Prior to this, it seemed like he peaked early with "Va Va Va Voom" and its B-side, the tremendous Ziggy Stardust rip "Space Ace," but the rest of the originals are on par with these two peaks: "Highty Tighty" speeds by on sleazy horns and a tight, sexy rhythm; "April in Paris" has a foppish swagger like the best Marc Bolan, while "Pre-Columbian Love" kicks like a good T. Rex rocker; "Run for the Sun" is Roxy Music for the teen set; "Queen of Hearts" has a Baroque art pop spaciness that proves Smiley was not just a keen alchemist, but was developing a voice of his own. Though ...
| | Alex Chilton Cliches/Loose Shoes, Tight Pussy CD (2005) (Import) United Kingdom
Getting Out
$16.55
| | Little Plastic Pilots CD (2005)
Getting Out
$10.39
| | Stevie Ray Vaughan Collections CD (2006) (Import) Holland; Canada
Getting Out
$11.79
| | Cirque Du Soleil Alegria CD (2006) (Import)
Getting Out
$33.09
| | Robert Plant Mighty Rearranger CD (2005) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Getting Out
$10.45 Robert Plant & the Strange Sensation: Skin Tyson (acoustic guitar); Robert Plant (harmonica); Justin Adams (bass instrument); Billy Fuller (double bass); Clive Deamer (bendir); John Baggot (electronics).
Against all odds, Robert Plant, the ultimate '70s rock god, has consistently managed to remain artistically relevant throughout the decades of his post-Led Zeppelin career. In the 1980s he updated his sound to incorporate an almost new-wave sensibility on his solo albums, as well as turning the clock all the way back to the '50s with jump-blues band the Honeydrippers--hardly the stuff of "Kashmir."
While there are some echoes of Zep on MIGHTY REARRANGER (Bonhamesque whomping drums, Middle Eastern influences, transmogrified blues riffs), Plant isn't resting on his laurels here. The synth-filled "Tin Pan Valley" bears more of a ...
| | Brad Schachter Prayer For A Child CD (2007)
Getting Out
$14.79 Born in Los Angeles, Brad started acting at the age of 4 doing national TV commercials, voice-overs and TV shows. He started singing and performing at the age of 9 and continued to develop his craft on stage throughout college.After traveling throughout ...
|
|
|