| | Wayne Wonder Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers CD Wayne Wonder Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers Music Wayne Wonder Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers Songs | 1. | Good Things Come My Way | $0.99 | |
| 2. | You Are My Woman | $0.99 | |
| 3. | In Your Eyes | |
| 4. | Let's Make a Deal | |
| 5. | Call It Off | |
| Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers Music Review Purchase Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Only Doo-Wop Collection You'll Ever Need CDs (2005)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers album
$17.05
| | Donny Hathaway Collection CD (1990)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers CD music
$8.75 Unfortunately, Atlantic's A Donny Hathaway Collection, one of the few career retrospectives available (and basically the only one in print), isn't quite definitive; it presents a version of Hathaway's career inordinately focused on his commercially successful duets ...
| | Maxwell Now CD (2001)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers music CDs
$8.49 "Lifetime" was nominated for the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance.
Rebounding from the slight sophomore lag generated by 1998's EMBRYA, Maxwell's follow-up NOW abandons the neo-soul man's usual M.O. of using a conceptual arc of songs, and instead focuses on individual cuts. Romance remains the main ingredient ...
| | Canton Jones Kingdom Business, Pt. 2 CD (2009)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers songs
$11.39
| | T I Paper Trail CD (2008) Explicit Version
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers album
$15.65 After a year on lock-down for illegal machine gun possession, the self-proclaimed king of the south channels his personal strife into his introspective sixth studio album, PAPER TRAIL. The title stems from T.I.'s decision to return to writing his rhymes down on paper; the lyrical craftsmanship shows as the ATL icon delves into personal issues--speaking on his legal troubles ("Ready For Whatever"), his prison experience ("You Ain't Missing Nothing"), ...
| | Keb' Mo' CD (1994)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers CD music
$7.19 The first solo release by contemporary blues-based artist Keb Mo' mixes a reverence for traditional country blues with more streamlined elements of commercial pop. Despite a convincing "down-home" approach of gravel-textured vocals and superior slide work and finger-picking skills, Keb Mo' avoids the pose of a hard line revivalist. Instead, he chooses to employ his fluency in the Delta tradition as a palette on which to blend a connoisseur's sampling of various musical genres. Country, funk, swing, and late 20th-Century folk balladry (Traci Chapman, James Taylor and Bob Dylan) all manage to make their way into the mix for a seamless blend of roots and radio friendliness.
Keyboards, bass and drums (in addition ...
| | Frank Sinatra Point Of No Return CD (1961) Remastered
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers music CDs
$11.89 This is part of Capitol Records "Entertainer Of The Century" series.
This was Sinatra's last recording for Capitol: all songs were recorded in September 1961, except the bonus tracks, which were recorded in 1953. In 1961 he left Capitol to start his own record label, Reprise Records.
The aptly titled POINT OF NO RETURN is a portrait of a man at odds with himself and his world, both literally (the moody cover ...
| | Jaco Pastorius Big Band Word Of Mouth Revisited CD (2003)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers songs
$13.59 This is a Hybrid Super Audio CD playable on both regular and Super Audio CD players.
Back before he turned everyone's idea of bass playing inside out, Jaco Pastorius spent five years on the bandstand with the Peter Graves Orchestra at Bachelors III, a swanky spot in his hometown of Ft. Lauderdale. Nearly three decades after the future star's departure in 1975, and 16 years after his brutal murder, Graves got the guys back together, christened them in their former colleague's name, and invited the most prominent bass guitarists of the early 21st century down to join them in a project dedicated to Pastorius' legacy. Throughout these polished performances, the bass parts testify to how profoundly Pastorius altered that instrument's role. Bottom line (so to speak): he gave them the option of playing from a soloist mentality and blowing all over the beat, as fast and free as any saxophonist, as long as he or she had chops and didn't subvert the groove. The guest bassists on this collection absorbed this lesson long ago. Each can scatter quick licks, some of them even faster than Pastorius himself. So why does a vague disenchantment haunt these performances? Perhaps it's because these players, great as they are, are still emulating more than discovering. Some imitate even the nuances of the Pastorius tone and phrasing, as does Richard Bona on "Punk Jazz" -- which, of course, may be a form of tribute in this context. On an opposite extreme, the light-speed, staccato hailstorm unleashed by Victor Wooten on "Teen Town" is fundamentally unmusical, focusing on the player more than the material being played -- which is, come to think of it, the real revelation here. Pastorius' tunes reflect a compositional maturity that wasn't always evident in the more improvisational context of Weather Report, and his arrangements -- notably an idiosyncratic t
Includes liner notes by John C. Bruening.
Producers: Peter Graves, Michael J. Hurzon, Marcus Miller.
Lyricist: Allen Perry.
Personnel: Jaco Pastorius (electric bass); Randy Bernsen (guitar, koto); Billy Ross (flute, piccolo, woodwinds, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Gary Keller (flute, clarinet, woodwinds, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Michael Brignola (flute, bass clarinet, woodwinds, baritone saxophone); Mike Scaglione (flute, tenor saxophone); Ed Calle (clarinet, woodwinds, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Marcus Miller (bass clarinet, soprano saxophone, Clavinet, bass synthesizer, bass ...
| | Driven CD (2004)
$14.65 | | David Bowie Diamond Dogs CDs (1974) (Import) Import
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers album
$62.45 The 30th anniversary of David Bowie's 1974 DIAMOND DOGS is celebrated on this two-CD edition, featuring the singer's trademark "Rebel, Rebel," and such hits as "1984" and the title track.
After George Orwell's widow refused Bowie the right to use 1984 as the title of his forthcoming album, he instead used the novel as a conceptual blueprint for what became DIAMOND DOGS. Accompanied only by keyboardist Mike Garson, bassist Herbie Flowers, and drummers Aynsley Dunbar and Tony Newman, Bowie played guitar, sax, Moog, and Mellotron, in addition to his contributions as vocalist, composer, arranger, and producer of the album. With the Orwellian themes as a loose backdrop, DIAMOND DOGS has much of the apocalyptic sense of future shock that informed ZIGGY STARDUST AND THE SPIDERS FROM MARS.
While the album doesn't have the musical punch or the songwriting strengths of ZIGGY, its gems make it more than worthwhile. The lush strings and dominant wah-wah guitar of "1984" seem like a nod to Isaac Hayes, while Bowie's howls and snarling sax on the title track make it instantly memorable. The glam rock classic ...
| | Mark Allen Felton Blessing CD (2006)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers CD music
$16.39
| | Cat Stevens Footsteps In The Light CD (2006)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers music CDs
$13.95
| | Etta Jones Don't Misunderstand: Live In New York CD (2007)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers songs
$13.85
| | Antonio Ciacca Rush Life CD (2008)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers album
$14.39
| | Dean Martin Heroes Collection CD (2009) (Import)
Meets Chaka Demus & Pliers CD music
$9.69
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