| | Tunnels Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously CD Tunnels Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Tunnels has spent the last year touring extensively and this recording is a reflection of this intense touring schedule. After three studio recordings, it made sense to put together a live album, as the spontaneity in performance is the true spirit of Tu
Tunnels: Marc Wagnon (vibraphone); Percy Jones (bass instrument); Frank Katz (drums).
Additional personnel: John Goodsall (guitar).
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously Music Tunnels Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously Songs | 1. | Tunnels |
| 2. | Franks Beard |
| 3. | Barrio |
| 4. | Flavor |
| 5. | Prisoners of the Knitting Factory Hallway |
| 6. | Syzgy Incident, The |
| 7. | Wall to Wall Sunshine |
| 8. | Lilly's Dolphin |
| 9. | Bad American Dream Th 43rd |
| 10. | Inseminator |
| Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously Music Review Purchase Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Tunnels Progressivity CD (2002)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously album
$13.85 Led by former Brand X fretless bassist Percy Jones, this maddeningly creative, wild, and sometimes experimental trio makes no bones about its desire to carry on in the hardcore jazz fusion traditions of the risk-taking era of Miles Davis, Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Tony Williams. They're very good natured about the sacrifice of possible commerce for art's sake. In their liner notes, they actually say something about the recording containing ...
| | Mahavishnu Orchestra Mahavishnu CD (1984)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously CD music
$12.39
| | Jing Chi 3D CD (2004)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously music CDs
$13.69
| | Dennis Chambers Boston T Party CD (2006)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously songs
$13.85
| | Tunnels Natural Selection CD (2006)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously album
$13.79
| | Trio Of Doom CD (2007)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously CD music
$8.99
| | Dead Kennedys Fresh Fruit For Rotting Vegetables CDs (1980) (Import) England; Limited Edition
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously music CDs
$22.05 Repressing features bonus material, including bonus CD of three singles.
To followers of the early-'80s West Coast punk scene, few acts have greater import than the Dead Kennedys, and FRESH FRUIT FOR ROTTING VEGETABLES is their definitive work. Fueled by the hyperactive, paranoid rants of frontman Jello Biafra, the band lays out a blueprint for societal upheaval, preaching distrust of everything, and the eventual breakdown of the totalitarian police state in which we live. His disturbing world view is propelled by the guitar stylings of East Bay Ray, who replaced punk's stereotypical volume assault with carefully chosen and flawlessly executed bursts of musical sarcasm and frightening sonic inventiveness.
The album's opener, "Kill the Poor," is a jubilant excoriation of society's treatment of poverty. Songs like "Let's Lynch The Landlord" and "Stealing Peoples' Mail" provide detailed (and hysterically funny) plans for undermining society's oppression, as does "Chemical Warfare," which even goes so far as to act out the violent rebellion. This was rage of unprecedented intellect, vitriol whose eloquence only served to make it more effective. The politics of the classics "Holiday In Cambodia" and "California Uber Alles" are extreme and violent, but also expertly stated and brilliantly executed.
A hyper-speed blast of ultra-polemical, left-wing hardcore punk, and bitingly funny sarcasm, Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables stands as the Dead Kennedys' signature statement. As one of the first hardcore albums, it was a galvanizing influence on the musical and attitudinal development of the genre, also helping to kickstart the fertile California scene. The record's tactics are not subtle in the least; Jello Biafra's odd warble and spat-out lyrics leave no doubt as to what he thinks, baiting his targets of conservatism, violence, overbearing authority, and capitalist greed with a viciously satirical sarcasm that keeps his unflinchingly political outlook from becoming too didactic. The thin production dilutes some of the music's power, but the ragged speed-blur ...
| | Ballin The Jack Big Head CD (2001)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously songs
$14.65 Ballin' the Jack's second release, The Big Head, jitterbugs its way right out of the starting gate with a rendering of Duke Ellington's "Jubilee Stomp." This time around sees the contemporary jazz septet interpreting swing and blues classics by such legends as Benny Goodman, Jelly Roll Morton, and Tommy Dorsey, among others, and paying tribute to the beginning of bebop or, as some call the genre, the root of rock & roll. Ballin' the Jack also flex their muscles in the area of originals, of which there are five on this disc. Of note is the bluesy "L'Esprit Django," written by guitarist Ben Sher, whose performance here is best described as smooth, smooth, ...
| | Tony Williams Believe It CD (1975) (Import) Bonus Tracks; Germany
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously album
$10.55
| | Amanda Carr Live In San Giorgio CD (2000)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously CD music
$12.69 "LIVE: IN SAN GIORGIO" Release date: 2000 on OMS RecordsA soulful collection of jazz standards and originals performed live in the foothills of the Italian Alps. Accompanied by the Martinale Trio, Amanda captures the essence of this romantic region. PERSONNEL:VOCALS: Amanda CarrPIANOFORTE: Luigi MartinaleCONTRABASSO: Nicola MuresuBATTERIA: Paolo FrancisconeIn 1998, Amanda headlined at the EuroJazz festival in Ivrea, Italy where she shared the stage with International jazz artists James ...
| | Serge Chaloff Boston Blow-Up CD (1955) Bonus Tracks
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously music CDs
$10.69
| | Traffic John Barleycorn Must Die CD (2006) (Import)
Live: The Art Of Living Dangerously songs
$27.59
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