| | 3 Doors Down Away From The Sun CD 3 Doors Down Discography of CDs
"When I'm Gone" was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for Best Rock Song and Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal.
This is a Hybrid Super Audio CD playable on both regular and Super Audio CD players.
This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other.
After almost two years of constant touring, 3 Doors Down return as stronger songwriters and equally passionate musicians with AWAY FROM THE SUN. Instantly catchy, singable choruses, as on "When I'm Gone," are emblematic of what thrust the group's debut album (A BETTER LIFE) into the hearts and minds of rock fans. Hints of a Creed influence peek through on the title track, while an early Pearl Jam vibe permeates "Running Out Of Days." Fans are sure to hold their lighters high overhead for ballads such as "Here Without You." Producer Rich Parashar returns to the helm for AWAY WITH THE SUN, and in-demand session drummer Josh Freese pounds out solid grooves.
Contains an untitled hidden track following "Sarah Yellin'."
Additional personnel includes: Josh Freese (drums).
Dual Disc CD/DVD
Recorded at London Bridge, Seattle, Washington; Greenhouse, Burnaby, Canada and Ocean Way Studios, Hollywood, California.
3 Doors Down: Brad Arnold (vocals); Matt Roberts, Chris Henderson (guitar); Todd Harrell (bass).
3 Doors Down: Brad Arnold (vocals); Chris Henderson , Matt Roberts (guitar); Todd Harrell (bass guitar).
Additional personnel: David Campbell (strings); Rich Hopkins (Hammond b-3 organ); Josh Freese (drums); Matthew Burgess (percussion). Away From The Sun Review
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Purchase Away From The Sun CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | 3 Doors Down Better Life CD (2000)
Away From The Sun album
$10.39 "Kryptonite" was nominated for the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Rock Song.
The success story of 3 Doors Down starts typically enough. An aggressive ...
| | Believer DVD (2002)
Away From The Sun CD music
$17.89 Raised Jewish, Danny (Ryan Gosling) now runs with an anti-Semitic skinhead gang in Queens. Attending a meeting held by prominent self-proclaimed fascist Curtis Zampf (Billy Zane), Danny is noticed when he proposes killing Jews as a solution to society's problems. Danny's words create excitement not only for their racist content, but also for his articulate way of expressing himself and his ...
| | 3 Doors Down Seventeen Days CD (2005) DualDisc
Away From The Sun music CDs
$15.49 This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other.
In 2000, 3 Doors Down achieved major success by adding a rough-and-ready Southern-rock edge to angsty Creed-style neo-grunge. With its third album, SEVENTEEN DAYS, the Mississippi band strips its sound down even further, often adding a grinding, metallic ...
| | Orianthi Believe CD (2009)
Away From The Sun songs
$9.09 With her mind-blowing mix of heavy metal guitar prowess and bluesy, soulful vocals, Orianthi will draw some justifiably ...
| | Shirley Bassey Performance CD (2009)
Away From The Sun album
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| | Breaking Benjamin Dear Agony CD (2009)
Away From The Sun CD music
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| | John Avery Once I Had It All Now I Just Have...Everything CD (2000)
Away From The Sun music CDs
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| | Kansas City CD (1995) Original Soundtrack
Away From The Sun songs
$12.69 The soundtrack to Robert Altman's "Kansas City" will take you back to the heyday of swing, Kansas City style. It features a big band of today's lions glorifying jazz's golden age, dressed in the trappings of their predecessors. Yet there's no mistaking their true faces underneath their half-century-old hats.
It kicks off with the creeping and gritty "Blues In The Dark," a Count Basie standard featuring the unmistakable cry and response of tenormen James Carter and Joshua Redman, whose performances are soulful, rousing and plaintive. The big band glides through Bennie Moten's "Moten Swing," one of the swing era's definitive tunes, and struts on Count Basie's "Lafayette." Smooth as a K.C. gangster. Kevin Mahogany takes the mic for "I Left My Baby," an old-fashioned juke-joint romp, complete with an enthusiastic crowd (sounding like it's surrounding you) egging on each musician. On Coleman Hawkins' "Queer Notions" you can hear David Murray walking in Bean's shoes. In fact, the very spirits of Bennie Moten's and Count Basie's orchestras are quite present throughout this foray into the swinging golden age of Kansas City jazz.
For Robert Altman's Kansas City film, since the story was centered in 1934 Kansas City, Altman wanted to have younger musicians depict top jazz artists of the era playing at one of the legendary jam sessions. He recruited many of today's top modernists and, although they used arrangements based on older recordings, they did not have to necessarily improvise in the style of the time. Actually, it is surprising how close the musicians often come, recapturing not just the music of the period but the adventurous spirit of such immortals as Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster, and Lester Young. A dozen songs from the film are on this very enjoyable and unique CD, which features such players as trumpeter Nicholas Payton, clarinetist Don Byron, guitarists Russell Malone and Mark Whitfield, pianists Geri Allen and Cyrus Chestnut, altoists Jesse Davis and David "Fathead" Newman, and four of today's great tenors: James Carter, Craig Handy, David Murray, and Joshua Redman. In addition, Kevin Mahogany sings "I Left ...
| | Oi! It's A World Invasion V.3 CD (2008) (Import) Import
Away From The Sun album
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| | Uranus Bruyant Yac'H Mat CD (2003) (Import) Import
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| | Frank Reyes En Vivo CD (2004)
Away From The Sun album
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| | Peter Hammill Singularity CD (2006) Import
Away From The Sun CD music
$15.45 Peter Hammill has been at it for almost 40 years now, and yet, since the early 2000s, he has been on a new way up, creatively speaking. Clutch (2002) and Incoherence (2004), his previous two studio albums, had both hit high artistic marks, but that is only one of the main reasons why Singularity was so highly anticipated by the fans. It was also the Thin Man's first studio album since remastering his '70s LPs for EMI, his first since the re-formation of his old group, Van der Graaf Generator. Yet, most importantly, especially for a man of words like he is, it was his first studio release since his heart attack two years earlier. Were all the expectations generated by these "firsts" met? Surprisingly, yes. Singularity stands among Hammill's best albums of the past 25 years. He recorded it entirely on his own, playing everything, including drums, something he had not done since 1980's A Black Box. The songs are also significantly darker than on previous albums and integrate more experimental elements, two factors bestowing a certain reminiscence of his late-'70s oeuvre again. Singularity is full of backward textures, abstract sound paintings, and massed choruses that go resolutely beyond the way Hammill was overdubbing his vocals in the past decade. The "weirdness" factor culminates in the closing "White Dot," by far the man's most stunning aural concoction of late. Before reaching that apocalyptic finale, the listener is treated to a number of excellent, more accessible tunes, including two strong rock songs ("Our Eyes Give It Shape," very uplifting, and "Vainglorious Boy," reminiscent of the material found on Roaring Forties, another standout album), a couple of heartfelt ballads (including the moving "Meanwhile My Mother"), and strange midway tracks in "Event Horizon" and "Famous Last Words," which pair up strong songwriting and epic leanings, Hammill's forte since the early '70s. After the guitar-only Clutch and the keyboard-heavy Incoherence, Singularity gets back to a certain balance, adding along the way an experimental vein that must be coming from remastering LPs such as The Future Now and A Black Box. The ...
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