| | Franck Vigroux Lilas Triste CD Franck Vigroux Discography of CDs
Personnel: Franck Vigroux (guitar, fretless guitar, computer); Hélène Breschand (vocals, harp); Cecile Rives (vocals); Fabrice Andrivon (spoken vocals); David Fiuczynski (guitar). Franck Vigroux Lilas Triste Songs Lilas Triste Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Franck Vigroux Lilas Triste CD. 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 Lilas Triste CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Rod Stewart Never A Dull Moment CD (1971) Gold
Lilas Triste
$19.10 Essentially a harder-rocking reprise of Every Picture Tells a Story, Never a Dull Moment never quite reaches the heights of its predecessor, but it's a wonderful, multi-faceted record in its own right. Opening with the touching, autobiographical rocker "True Blue," which finds Rod Stewart trying to come to grips with his newfound stardom but concluding that he'd "rather be back home," the record is the last of Stewart's series of epic fusions of hard rock and folk. It's possible to hear Stewart go for superstardom with the hard-rocking kick and fat electric guitars of the album, but the songs still cut to the core. "You Wear It Well" is a "Maggie May" rewrite on the surface, but it develops into a touching song about being emotionally inarticulate. Similarly, "Lost Paraguayos" is funny, driving folk-rock, and it's hard not to be swept away when the Stonesy hard rocker "Italian Girls" soars into a mandolin-driven coda. The covers -- whether a soulful reading of Jimi Hendrix's "Angel," an empathetic version of Dylan's "Mama, You Been on My Mind," or a stunning interpretation of Etta James' ...
| | Transatlantic The Whirlwind CDs (2009)
Lilas Triste
$18.38
| | Halford III: Winter Songs CD (2009) Special Edition; Digipak
Lilas Triste
$15.55 Personnel: Rob Halford (vocals); Mike Chlasciak (guitar); Ed Roth (keyboards); Bobby Jarzombek (drums). Audio Mixer: Pete Martinez. Arrangers: Rob Halford; Ed Roth. At first glance, Halford's entry into the crowded holiday market looks like a parody. Heavy metal and Christmas make for strange bedfellows, and WINTER ...
| | Paul Davis CD (1971)
Lilas Triste
$9.44
| | Justin Bieber My World CD (2009) Enhanced CD
Lilas Triste
$7.96 Within a couple years, Canadian teenager Justin Bieber ...
| | Rick Derringer Sky Is Falling CD (2009)
$8.80 | | Deep Purple Smoke On The Water CD (1998)
Lilas Triste
$5.25
| | Homebrewer's, Vol. 2 CD (2004) Import
Lilas Triste
$19.39
| | Petula Clark Tennessee Waltz CD (2005) Import; Remastered
Lilas Triste
$9.79
| | Phil Woods Thrill Is Gone CD (2008) (Import) Japan
Lilas Triste
$40.75
| | Tristania Illumination CD (2007) (Import) Germany
Lilas Triste
$14.45 Long-running Norwegian goth metal band Tristania return with Illumination, an album that largely dispenses with the overtly metallic aspects of their earlier sound. In their place, Tristania have perhaps inadvertently created a single-handed revival of the late-'80s goth rock sound, much beloved by mascara-wearing, black-clad students of both sexes with late-night college radio shows. Songs like "Down" and "Sacrilege" are hugely reminiscent of the ...
| | Toby Knapp Polarizing Lines CD (2006)
Lilas Triste
$10.65
| | Donnas Greatest Hits Vol. 16 CD (2009)
Lilas Triste
$10.19 The joke is, of course, that GREATEST HITS, VOL. 16 is not the Donnas' 16th collection of hits, nor is the album even a collection of hits. Instead, it's a hodgepodge of new songs, alternate versions, B-sides, and live and re-recorded versions of songs they originally recorded for Atlantic, plus a remix -- a collection of odds and sods that by its nature would seem to hold interest only for diehards, but there's a smidgeon of truth that this, like other albums called Greatest Hits, can be used as an introduction to the Donnas because it captures their reckless roar as well as any of their other albums. Arguably, it captures their sound better than their glossy major-label platters for Atlantic -- certainly, "Take It Off" sounds more aggressive here than it did on SPEND THE NIGHT -- or even the somewhat leaden thud of their 2007 return to the minors, BITCHIN', giving as good a dose of thunder as the band ever has. The joke is, of course, that Greatest Hits, Vol. 16 is not the Donnas' 16th collection of hits, nor is the album even a collection of hits. Instead, it's a hodgepodge of new songs, alternate versions, B-sides, and live and re-recorded versions of songs they originally recorded for Atlantic, plus a remix -- a collection of odds and sods that by its nature would seem to hold interest only for diehards, but there's a smidgeon of truth that this, like other albums called Greatest Hits, can be used as an introduction to the Donnas because it captures their reckless roar as well ...
|
|
|