| | Liesegang White Visual CD - Import Liesegang White Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Extremities guitarist Liesegang (Rod Stewart, 101 South, Motorhead) and vocalist White (Rainbow, Midnight Blue) team up for an album full of classic melodic and hard rock. Liesegang White Visual Songs | 1. | Prayer For The Dying |
| 2. | Snake Eyes |
| 3. | Last Temptation |
| 4. | Worlds Collide |
| 5. | New Addiction |
| 6. | Vivaldi |
| 7. | Gathering |
| 8. | Lost Horizons |
| 9. | Ballad Of Bible John |
| 10. | Black Winter |
| 11. | Old Father Time |
| Purchase Visual CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Guess Who Anthology CDs (2003) Remastered
Visual album
$15.95 Recorded between 1964 & 1975. Includes liner notes by Michael Hill.
This double set replaces both previously released RCA multi-disc overviews of Guess Who hits. As of its appearance in late 2003, both the flawed triple-CD 56-track The Ultimate Collection and 1988's excellent Track Record compilations were out of print. This release tries, and generally succeeds, as a comprehensive overview of the band's glory years. In fact, it's the only one to kick off with two pre-Burton Cummings nuggets: 1964's "Shakin' All Over" and a rare 1966 garage rocking psychedelic single, "It's My Pride." Collectors will also appreciate an early 1968 version of "When Friends Fall Out," a song re-recorded three years later for the American Woman album. From there on, this is a sturdy if unremarkable collection of fairly obvious selections, some of them, such as "Heartbroken Bopper," "Glamour Boy," and "Hang On to Your Life," reproduced in difficult to find single mixes. Of minor note, "Smoke Big Factory" from the underrated Rockin' makes its first appearance on a hits album, as do the Winter/Wallace co-penned "Cardboard Empire" from #10 and "Samantha's Living Room," ...
| | Automatic Man Visitors CD (1977)
Visual CD music
$13.85 With its second and final album, Visitors, Automatic Man unveiled a new lineup. Lead singer/keyboardist Bayeté (real name: Todd Cochrane) and guitarist Pat Thrall were still on board, but bassist Doni Harvey and former Santana drummer Michael Shrieve were gone-and their replacements were bassist Jerome Rimson and drummer Glenn Symmonds. The Bay Area quartet was still interracial (half white, half black), but with the personnel changes came a more commercial approach. While Automatic Man's self-titled debut ...
| | Bernie Marsden Blues 'N' Scales: A Snakeman's Odyssey CDs (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Visual music CDs
$27.59
| | 707 Magic CD (2006)
Visual songs
$12.75
| | Greenslade Bedside Manners Are Extra CD (1973)
Visual album
$9.69 Aside from a few minor differences, 1973's Bedside Manners Are Extra is equivalent to Greenslade's debut album, inundated with the same dazzling synthesizer work and atmospheric guitar implementations from Tony Reeves. Andrew McCulloch's drumming is a little more effective the whole album through, balancing out Dave Greenslade's keyboards and Dave Lawson's singing. ...
| | Greenslade CD (1973) Reissued
Visual CD music
$9.55
| | Mart Rodger Manchester Jazz CD (2004)
Visual music CDs
$13.85
| | Circus CD (1974)
Visual songs
$11.59 Circus' only released album is something of a letdown. They attained considerable popularity on the bountiful Madison, WI, rock scene and then throughout the Midwest festival circuit due to their impressive live show and jamming capabilities. And the list of artists that they supported makes for a winning resume. But Circus is not nearly as interesting as albums by fellow scenesters SOUP or Tayles because the band was mostly unable to translate the excitement of their live shows into the recording studio. Instead of a talented improvisational band, it makes them sound more often like a pedestrian blues-rock or hard rock outfit. The band's signature claim to fame is their utilization of synthesizers, particularly the Moog and clavinet, and the instruments do add intriguing textures, but they are unable to conceal the rather plodding, drab songwriting. Their original tunes pale in comparison to even the second-rate tunes by the Allman Brothers Band and the Grateful Dead, two bands that seem to be touchstones for Circus. They simply are unable to muster many melodies that are particularly memorable, and when they do, as on "Fat Boogie Mama," it is borrowed almost entirely -- even down to the actual hook -- from Loggins & Messina's "Your Mama Can't Dance." The most interesting original may be "Travlin' Blues," which, contrary to the title, is solid country-rock with a nice banjo solo. It suggests that Circus may have benefited from leaning harder on that genre, at least in the recording studio. That notion is supported by their country-folk version of Ray Davies' "Skin and Bones," by far the best actual song on the album, with its exquisite acoustic slide guitar. The lack of a distinctive artistic impulse is all the more unfortunate because the five members are such outstanding players, even approaching the high skill level of their inspirations. The dual-guitar attack is hardly visionary, but it is thrilling, and Fred Omernik's keyboard work is superb. The lead vocals are nothing special, but the harmonies frequently are, especially when they appropriate the lead. Still, Circus was primarily a live attraction, and a much in-demand one at that. So it is no surprise that the most satisfying performance on the album is the 12-and-a-half-minute jam on the Rhinoceros cut "Old Age," full of awesome organ ...
| | Tol & Tol Collection CD (2001) (Import) Germany
Visual album
$40.75
| | Motley Crue Generation Swine CD (1997) Japan; Mini LP Sleeve
Visual CD music
$36.99 Call this album the return of the prodigal son, as Vince Neil was restored to the mic stand here following a one-album hiatus. GENERATION SWINE brought Motley Crue into the '90s by recasting their sound in the post-industrial mold of Nine Inch Nails and Ministry. The Crue tried to revamp their image and sound by employing Skinny Puppy's ...
| | Various Artists Club Collection CD (2006) (Import) Import
Visual music CDs
$22.35
| | Tangorodrim Unholy And Unlimited CD (2004) Limited Edition
Visual songs
$10.69 Black metal purists Tangorodrim believe in the power of vinyl, on which a limited number of 666 copies of their Unholy and Unlimited album were pressed, with no plans for a CD version anytime soon. Hailing from Israel, of all places, they also believe in the power of absolute primitivism, taking the low road of heavy metal de-evolution in a bid for the sort of sonic infamy which bred underground metal heroes like Venom, Hellhammer, and Bathory before ...
| | Bathtub Mothers CD (2009)
Visual album
$12.15
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