| | Labyrinth No Limits CD Labyrinth Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $11.09 CD Backorder: (Usually ships in 3-10 days) 
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A metal band that truly knows NO LIMITS, Labyrinth takes the genre by the scruff of the neck and shakes 13 original songs onto this 13-track release.
Reissue of the Italian metal act's 1999 debut album, features 13 tracks including 2 bonus tracks, 'Call Me' & 'Miles Away'. Icarus. 2004. Labyrinth No Limits Songs | 1. | Mortal Sin |
| 2. | Midnight Resistance |
| 3. | Dreamland |
| 4. | Piece of Time |
| 5. | Vertigo |
| 6. | In the Shade |
| 7. | No Limits |
| 8. | Right Sign, The |
| 9. | Red Zone |
| 10. | Time Has Come |
| 11. | Looking For |
| 12. | Call Me (Bonus Track) |
| 13. | Miles Away (Bonus Track) |
| Purchase No Limits CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Procol Harum Whiter Shade Of Pale CD (1972) (Import) Germany
No Limits album
$18.79 Procol Harum's first album was originally released without the inclusion of "A Whiter Shade of Pale," a song that had been a monumental hit just before the LP appeared. In subsequent releases, the running order of the album was slightly ...
| | Lizzy Borden Love You To Pieces CD (1985)
No Limits CD music
$9.79 Although Enigma Records was better known for its connection to the mid-'80s Paisley Underground scene (Rain Parade, Game Theory, etc.), the Los Angeles-based indie was also among the first to document the rebirth of glam metal, which overtook the L.A. club scene at the same time, by issuing the first album by Mötley Crüe, Poison, and others. The glam-poppy Lizzy Borden was also ran in the hair metal sweepstakes, but its debut album, 1985's Love You to Pieces, holds up better than many other documents from the era. The packaging, complete with faux-goth band logo and the requisite hot big-haired chick in lingerie, is crushingly obvious, and the entire album flirts with cliché. Lizzy Borden himself -- who like Alice Cooper adopted the band's name as his own -- sounds uncannily like Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson ...
| | Lizzy Borden Menace To Society CD (1986)
No Limits music CDs
$9.69 Lizzy Borden's second studio album, following the live The Murderess Metal Road Show by only a few months, is the band's career high point. A nice balance between the energetic but cliché-ridden pop-metal of its debut and the undistinguished Poison ripoffs of its later albums, Menace to Society drops the dopey Spinal Tap-like ...
| | Anthrax Spreading The Disease CD (1985)
No Limits songs
$7.79 Anthrax's first full-length recording with new vocalist Joey Belladonna and bassist Frank Bello, 1985's SPREADING THE DISEASE, showed that the band had survived its first major lineup change without skipping a beat. If anything, the change strengthened the quintet, just in time ...
| | Whitesnake Come An Get It CD (Import) United Kingdom
No Limits album
$13.15 Whitesnake, the pop-metal band featuring former Deep Purple singer David Coverdale, released the album COME AN' GET IT in 1981.
Despite the massive talents of vocalist David Coverdale and his supporting cast of musicians (not to mention the unimpeachable resumé of producer Martin Birch), Come an' Get It was another maddeningly average Whitesnake album. A thoroughly boring set that played it too safe and yielded no lasting live favorites, Come an' Get It was competent to the max -- in the hands of a debuting artist, it may have qualified as a classic -- but for a near-supergroup of such experience and pedigree, it instead smacked of severe underachievement. Rare highlights include the driving energy of "Hot Stuff," the lively bar-room piano of "Wine, Women and Song," and the wistful, acoustic balladry of "Till the Day I Die." But these share space with run-of-the-mill bluesy rockers like "Don't Break My Heart Again" and "Would I Lie to You" -- all of them hard to fault, but equally impossible ...
| | Procol Harum Salty Dog CD (1969)
No Limits CD music
$16.29 A SALTY DOG...PLUS contains the complete 1969 original release plus 6 rare or previously unreleased bonus tracks.
This German import reissue is packaged in a digipak and contains the bonus track "Long Gone Geek."
Procol Harum, who reached an astounding peak with their 1967 debut, achieved further heights with each successive release up to A SALTY DOG, their third. This album mixes heartfelt singing with orchestral grandeur and an R&B-based rhythm section (B.J. Wilson is one of the great unsung drummers of the '60s and '70s). The band easily and honestly moves from the symphonic mini-epic of the title track to the bluesy "The Milk of Human Kindness." The dual keyboards offer a regal sheen that is nicely punctuated by Robin Trower's guitar. Throughout, Gary Brooker's vocals are richly barbed and the perfect vehicle to deliver lyricist Keith Reid's literary verses. With the departure of organist Matthew Fisher, this was the last great recording by the original line-up of Procol Harum. ...
| | Bon Jovi These Days CD (1995) (Import) Bonus Track; England; Remastered; Enhanced CD; Germany
No Limits music CDs
$11.99 Digitally remastered using 20-bit technology by George Marino (1998, Sterling Sound, New York, New York).
German remastered version comes with enhanced CD video footage of "These Days."
Riding a resurgence in popularity with the triple-platinum success of their greatest-hits package CROSSROADS, Bon Jovi returns with THESE DAYS, their first studio album since 1992's KEEP THE FAITH. And it's obvious that the alterna-rock nihilism exhibited by many of their more angst-ridden peers has affected the band's material, giving the blue-collar romanticism of the Jersey rockers a darker vibe.
Jon Bon Jovi's characters on THESE DAYS weigh in with more mature and darker conflicts than those explored on previous albums. On "Hey God," a family man on the brink of homelessness cries out for spiritual guidance. The title track goes a step further, describing the sheer hopelessness that goes with not ...
| | Francoise Hardy Stars CD (1997)
No Limits songs
$9.79
| | Leon Bryant Mighty Body CD (1994) (Import) Canada
No Limits album
$22.35
| | Marshal Law CD (2001)
No Limits CD music
$17.19
| | Raymond Lap Music 4 Brains PT. 1 CD (2006) (Import)
No Limits music CDs
$19.69
| | Alec Redfearn Blind Spot CD (2007)
No Limits songs
$15.05 Alec K. Redfearn & the Eyesores: Ellen Santaniello (soprano); Steve Jobe (hurdy-gurdy); Sarah Tolan-Mee, Olivia Geiger (violin); Laura Gulley (viola); Alec K. Redfearn (accordion); Matt McLaren (drums); Frank Difficult (programming); Margie Wienk, Chris Sadlers, Ann Schattle (unknown instrument); Jason McGill, Orion Rigel Dommisse, Erica Schattle, Domenick Panzarella.
The Blind Spot is Alec K. Redfearn & the Eyesores' saddest album yet. It also contains some of the group's prettiest arrangements. If you got into Redfearn's music via The Quiet Room, his first album for Cuneiform, chances are you will find this follow-up release somewhat of a letdown at first. Where is the buoyancy? Where is the bounciness? True, there is almost none of that here. What you will find, though, is the same heavily acoustic instrumentation, along with the same vocal counterpoints and intricacies between parts. The album opens on a short instrumental experiment, followed by two exquisite songs about dead girls. "Queen of the Wires" deserves special mention as one of the group's finest songs yet, the drama of the story being conveyed without any emotional shtick. After this three-part preamble, the album is entirely turned over to "I Am the Resurrection and the Light," an eight-part song cycle. In his liner notes, Redfearn explains that "the piece is intended as a eulogy for several of my friends ...
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