| | Kid Creole In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes CD Kid Creole Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
In Praise of Older Women & Other Crimes is a weaker album in the "disco/calypso/funk/Latin" genres. Nonetheless, this album is entertaining, humorous, fun, and worth buying for the feel-good, "Endicott." ~ Zachary Curd In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes Music Kid Creole In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes Songs | 1. | Endicott |
| 2. | Particularly In'rested |
| 3. | Name It |
| 4. | Darlin' You Can Take Me |
| 5. | Luv Got Me Dancin' on My Knees |
| 6. | Caroline Was a Drop-Out |
| 7. | He Can Have You |
| 8. | Animal Cop, The |
| 9. | Dowopsalsaboprock |
| 10. | You Can't Keep a Good Man Down |
| In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes Music Review Purchase In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Chills Kaleidoscope World CD (1986) (Import) Import; Australia
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes album
$23.75
| | Kid Creole Tropical Gangsters CD (1982)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes CD music
$10.65
| | Killing Floor CD (1995) With Book; Limited Edition; Digipak
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes music CDs
$16.65
| | Danny Kirwan Second Chapter CD (1975) With Book; Limited Edition; Digipak
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes songs
$19.79
| | Legend CD (2007) With Book; Limited Edition; Digipak
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes album
$16.59
| | Steamhammer Mountains CD (1970) (Import) With Book; Bonus Tracks; Digipak; Germany
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes CD music
$22.79
| | New York Renaissance Band Scheherazade & Other Stories CD (2000)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes music CDs
$13.95
| | Very Best Of The Modernaires With Paula Kelly CD (2001)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes songs
$11.59
| | Upland Breakdown CD (2001)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes album
$9.29
| | Janet Klein's Scandals" Or "Living In Sin CD (2004)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes CD music
$12.69 Yet another collection of "obscure, lovely and naughty songs," 2004's Living in Sin is probably Klein's strongest effort since her near-solo debut Come Into My Parlor. Klein's second album, Paradise Wobble, was a trifle awkward in the way it incorporated her new backing band, the Parlor Boys, and its follow-up, Put a Flavor to Love, was perhaps a shade below her earlier albums in terms of material. (Klein writes none of her own songs, choosing her repertoire from vintage songbooks and sheet music of the early 20th century.) Living in Sin, however, rebounds with a wonderfully idiosyncratic range of songs including a sly version of the rude old standard "Ballin' the Jack" to the utterly strange (but weirdly appropriate in the age of SARS and avian flu) novelty tune "Some Little Bug Is Going to Find You (The Germ Song)." Klein's vocals and ukulele remain front and center, but her band's varied and period-appropriate arrangements suit her unique sound perfectly. ~ Stewart Mason
JANET KLEIN & HER PARLOR BOYS"JANET KLEIN'S SCANDALS"AKA "LIVING IN SIN!"Ukulele chanteuse Janet Klein's 2004 most hotsy totsy CD release entitled"JANET KLEIN'S SCANDALS" vivaciously evokes the mischievous music of 1910-30s nightclubs, clip joints and dance halls with a simmering selection of early jazz tunes. Most of these 22 songs are originally from burlesque, Vitaphone short films, dance hall and movie musicals of the 1920s and 30s, many of which originally not intended for radio or records. In the vein of naughty comedy singers like Sophie Tucker, Eddie Cantor, Fannie Brice and Chico Marx, Janet renders these clever tunes with a loving flare like no other sweet spunky gal can. The captivating Janet Klein and Her Parlor Boys have a knack for bringing to life great forgotten music, in a fresh and irresistible way.The title and evocative cover of the CD is a play on images and words from the original 1930's George White Scandals variety show and follies. ...
| | John Lennon Live Peace In Toronto, 1969 CD (1969) (Import) Omr
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes music CDs
$27.69 This 1995 reissue of LIVE PEACE IN TORONTO, 1969 includes a 1995 version of the original John and Yoko calendar.
John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band: John Lennon; Alan White (drums); Yoko Ono (sound effects); Eric Clapton, Klaus Voormann.
Although one of the world's best-kept secrets at the time, this was John Lennon's declaration of independence from the Beatles, the document of a concert appearance at Toronto's Rock and Roll Revival festival about a month after the conclusion of the Abbey Road sessions. Thrown together literally on the wing (they rehearsed only on the flight from England), the ad-hoc band consisting of Lennon, Yoko Ono, Eric Clapton on guitar, Klaus Voorman on bass, and Alan White on drums hit the stage to the surprise and delight of the thousands who packed Varsity Stadium. "We're just going to do numbers we know, you know, because we've never played together before," confesses John, who was reportedly extremely nervous before going on. But the repertoire ought to have been a cakewalk for a quartet of seasoned rockers -- blues-based oldies ("Blue Suede Shoes," "Money," "Dizzy Miss Lizzie") and basic recent Lennon numbers ("Yer Blues," "Cold Turkey," "Give Peace a Chance") -- and they lay it down in a dignified, noisy, glorified garage band manner. Lennon is in fine vocal form, confident and funny despite his frequent apologies, while Yoko confines her caterwauling to "Cold Turkey." That was side one of the original LP. Side two, alas, was devoted entirely to Ono's wailing, pitchless, brainless, banshee vocalizing on "Don't Worry Kyoko" and "John John (Let's Hope for Peace)" -- the former backed with plodding rock rhythms and the latter with feedback. No wonder you see many used copies of the LP with worn A-sides ...
| | Kevin Ayers Shooting At The Moon CD (1970)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes songs
$13.79
| | Ras Midas Stand Up-Wise Up CD (2006) (Import)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes album
$26.29
| | Ill Wind Flashes CDs (1968)
In Praise Of Older Women And Other Crimes CD music
$20.69 Flashes does indeed have more flashes of potential than many of the countless other one-shot psychedelic albums of the late '60s, but this Boston group's sole effort is quite erratic, and not graced with much good material. The best points in their favor are the bracing vocals of Connie DeVanney, whether she's singing alone or blending with male voices in a manner reminiscent of (and probably highly influenced by) early Jefferson Airplane. But despite the presence of Tom Wilson at the production reins, the production often sounds underdeveloped, and the songs frequently meander in a derivative twilight between folk-rock and psychedelia. There are some fair driving folk-rockers in the 1967 Airplane style here, like "People of the Night" (with a lengthy Eastern-style psychedelic guitar break), "Hung-Up Chick," and "High Flying Bird," the last of them a folk song covered by numerous rockers in the last half of the 1960s, not least Jefferson Airplane themselves. "Dark World" is haunting folk-rock-psychedelia, and the best solo showcase for DeVanney's voice, while "Sleep" has some almost gothic male-female vocal interaction. But the album also has some overlong blues-rock noodling and psychedelic droning, mediocre good-time jug band-influenced stuff, and self-consciously heavy social commentary. ~ Richie Unterberger
The expanded edition of Ill Wind's only album presents the original Flashes on the first disc and an entire CD of extra material from the era on the second, which amounts to no less than 15 bonus tracks. The additional recordings aren't ...
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