| | Rod St James Has Anybody Seen The Superstar CD - Import Rod St James Discography of CDs
HAS ANYBODY SEEN THE SUPERSTAR reissues the 1972 debut album by obscure psych-folk rocker Rod St. James.
Superb slice of the swinging Seventies, this psych/soul/folk rock album is a superb example of years gone by. Contains some great heavy guitar work (wailing fuzz and wha-wha) funky percussion, trippy organ with laid back cool phased hippie vocals. The second half of the album showcasing a more folky feel. Think Donovan meets James Taylor meets Paul Williams Has Anybody Seen The Superstar Music Rod St James Has Anybody Seen The Superstar Songs | 1. | Has Anybody Seen the Superstar |
| 2. | Three Quarters of an Hour |
| 3. | Let It Shine |
| 4. | Mr. Coffey |
| 5. | I'm Going Home |
| 6. | Dream Chain |
| 7. | Wandering Minstrel |
| 8. | Now Is the Time |
| 9. | Pisces Child |
| 10. | Born to Ride the Restless Wind |
| Has Anybody Seen The Superstar Music Has Anybody Seen The Superstar Review
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Purchase Has Anybody Seen The Superstar CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | David Another Day, Another Lifetime CD (1968)
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar album
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| | Blues Image/Red, White & Blues Image CD (2005)
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| | Beauregard Ajax Deaf Priscilla CD (2006)
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar music CDs
$13.35 Southern California's Beauregard Ajax recorded Deaf Priscilla in late 1967 and early 1968, with legendary Del-Fi Records founder, Bob Keane producing, but the record was shelved when the group disbanded. Decades later a vinyl pressing was issued, and in 2006 Shadoks Music released it on CD for the first time, with four bonus tracks. As was the case for countless aspiring American rock collectives, the British Invasion from a few years earlier heavily influenced the five-piece (the singer even picked up an accent along the way), but as this was psychedelic age, the songs are augmented with slightly fuzzed-out blues licks. The actual tunes possess pleasing melodies, resulting in an overall light psych sound. Lyrically, the tone is usually pretty heavy, though, with such darker subject matters as loneliness, depression, failed relationships, and boredom. The group shows a whimsical side on "Kaleidoscope," and the bubblegummy "Happy Brontosaurus," but they are at their ...
| | Shadrack Chameleon CD (1970)
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar songs
$11.59 For an album created by a revolving group of friends from three separate bands, Shadrack Chameleon is quite a cohesive little surprise. Steve Fox is the only constant on each of the eight songs on the album, and, in a way, could be considered Shadrack Chameleon since his guitar, bass, songwriting, and vocal talents come to the forefront. Fox's thinnish vocals can be an acquired taste, but he is a strong, instinctive writer. A Jimmy Page influence (almost inevitable during the period) is discernible in the interesting, mystical chords and changes on the album. The band is certainly not a Zeppelin soundalike, though, because the changes that Fox and sometime-partner Randy Berka conceived are countered by a gentle acoustic feel and a languid rather than dynamic pulse. The band can employ a beautiful, stomping country-rock style, as on the opening cut "I Wonder Why," with its ensemble vocal hook (reminiscent of Emerson, Lake & Palmer's "Lucky Man") and organ, or it can be a heavier progressive rock outfit, as on "Long Road to Ole' Miss" and "Granite Feast." Mostly, though, Shadrack Chameleon might be termed progressive folk, and songs like "That's the Way It's Gotta Be" and "Don't Let It Get You Down" reveal ...
| | Day Blindness CD (1969)
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar album
$11.69 A typical description of Day Blindness involves references to the theoretically similar but inherently antithetical West Coast bands the Doors and Iron Butterfly, and it does in fact play something like a cross between those two groups, though with none of the musical nuance and aesthetic vision -- and none of the existential considerations -- of the former and with all the unrelenting bombast and sonic pretension of the latter. What it does have in common with the Doors is its organ-heavy, acid-touched moodiness and its dense blues underpinning, though it is unable to do anything significantly innovative with either element. And like Iron Butterfly, Day Blindness draped their music in a sometimes smothering, cerebrum-numbing blanket of quasi-metal guitar. The band, indeed, took their hard rock very seriously, and that leads to a good number of earnestly overblown moments. It also causes the nearly 40 minutes of music to drag as a whole and to dull one's appreciation for their more enticing aspects. And such aspects, though few, do indeed exist here. "I Got No Money" and "House and a Dog" aren't songs so much as chances to jam on blues changes, ...
| | Around Grapefruit CD (1968) (Import) United Kingdom
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar CD music
$18.39 Like the fruit after it was named, Grapefruit's debut album was at times too sweet, but was on the whole a promising and worthy effort. Devoted almost wholly to songs written by leader George Alexander, the record featured tuneful, upbeat mid-tempo late-'60s British rock with good harmonies, creative ...
| | Manfred Krug Das War Nur Ein Moment CD (1994) (Import) Germany
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| | Party Hits: 50'S & 60'S CDs (2001) Boxed Set
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| | DR Chud 'S X-Ward CD (2005)
$11.69 | | Best Of Southern Rock: Extended Versions CDs (2002) Boxed Set
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar album
$15.05 Rhino Flashback's Best of Southern Rock may seem diminutive (ten songs), but it successfully represents the genre that spawned the term boogie rock. There's no "Sweet Home Alabama" or "Ramblin' Man" here; instead the compilers have chosen to include works from some of the '70s lesser known acts like Black Oak Arkansas, Molly Hatchet, Blackfoot and Confederate Railroad, resulting in one of the more versatile collections of hard rock, blues and country rock. ~ James Christopher Monger
To call this compilation Best of Southern Rock is a bit of a misnomer, because it really isn't. The performances selected here aren't exactly the highest of quality, to say nothing ...
| | Darden Smith Field Of Crows CD (2005)
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar CD music
$13.85 On 2006's FIELD ...
| | Debbie Gibson Lost In Your Eyes CD (2003)
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar music CDs
$7.99 Even with all of her recent activity on-stage, onscreen, and on record, Debbie Gibson never really eclipsed the success of her early work as an aspiring teen pop sensation/songwriter/producer. However, what sets her apart from the rest of her class (as well as a large majority of the teen pop stars who came both before and after her time in the spotlight) was the fact that she wrote and produced ...
| | Hikers Music CD (2008)
Has Anybody Seen The Superstar songs
$12.59 Hikers Music
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