| | Amalia Rodrigues Alma Do Fado CD Amalia Rodrigues Discography of CDs
 |
|
Our Price: $12.79 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 2 available)
|  |
Alma Do Fado Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Amalia Rodrigues Alma Do Fado CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Alma Do Fado CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Pink Martini Splendor In The Grass CD (2009) Digipak
Alma Do Fado album
$13.39 Pink Martini follow the around-the-world-in-a-dozen-songs thrills of HEY EUGENE! with SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS, a mellower, simpler set of small pleasures. These are relative terms, however; the group's music is still well-traveled, with China Forbes singing in five languages (English, Spanish, Neapolitan, French, and Italian) instead of the six or so on EUGENE!. However, Pink Martini opt for a more unified sound here, one that draws on the more straightforward lounge-pop of their debut, SYMPATHIQUE, and the mellowness of '60s and '70s pop. SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS' first half is especially smooth, opening with the beautifully soft Neapolitan ballad "Ninna Nanna" and the title track, on which Forbes sings "I think we should take it slow" over swooping strings, brass, and piano that resurrect the glory days of AM pop; that feeling is echoed by the cover of Joe Raposo's "Sing," the Sesame Street song that gained popularity when the Carpenters performed it (Emilio Delgado, aka Sesame Street's Luis, duets with Forbes here in Spanish and English). The album's first few tracks are among its most playful, including the slinky yet winking "Ohayoo Ohio" and the French confection "Ou Est Ma Tete?" While Pink Martini gets almost too cute for their own good with "And Then You're Gone" and "But Now I'm Back," a pair of songs about a quarreling couple inspired by Franz Schubert's "Fantasy Piano for Four Hands" and featuring NPR justice correspondent Ari Shapiro on the latter's vocals, SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS' second half is among their finest work. ...
| | Buena Vista Social Club DVD (1999)
Alma Do Fado CD music
$7.09 No one can recall exactly where the Buena Vista Social Club once stood in pre- revolutionary Havana ...
| | Celtic Woman New Journey CD (2007)
Alma Do Fado music CDs
$13.89 The chart-busting Celtic Woman are a group of vocalists whose thrilling harmonies and fiery interpretations of traditional and modern folk songs have charmed an international audience. What distinguishes Celtic Woman from other Irish folk groups is the clever way they weave their emerald webs around even the unlikeliest songs. So in addition to fife-and-fiddle rave-ups like "Dualaman" and "Carrickfergus," ...
| | John Mcdermott Timeles Memories: The Greatest Hits CD (2006)
Alma Do Fado songs
$16.05
| | Claude Challe Buddha-Bar, Vol. II CDs
Alma Do Fado album
$42.69 Claude Challe's Buddha-Bar, Vol. II compilation has elements of Far Eastern spirituality, African song, European electronica, and Spanish spice. The first album, Buddha-Bar, is very mellow for the most part. Deepak Chopra and Demi Moore, far and away the most recognizable names on the album, do a spoken word ditty on love and self-worth. People who are not fans of new age doctrine will appreciate artists such as Oliver Shanti and Consuelo Luz, both of whom contribute songs that manage to sound musical, spiritual and ethnic at once. The second album varies from hallucinatory to groovy to fairly high-energy. "Tears Inshalla" will appeal to fans of Eastern-influenced trance. Lyrics are of almost no importance on the album. They do exist on most tracks, but they bounce around from English to Portuguese to Arabic. Bits and pieces and snatches of phrases come through here and there -- just enough to make a listener feel in sync with it all. This music is intended to be an ambient journey, and while a few of the tracks seem to stray off into Never Never Land, the majority of them should appeal to fans of worldbeat. ~ L. Katz
2004 reissue of the second installment in the Buddha Bar series. After the success of the first Buddha Bar mix by Claude Challe, the customers at the Paris bar may pay less attention to what's on their plate, concerned more with the background music and ambience which accompanies it. Challe proposes with Buddha Bar II the pleasure of reliving at home the insane nights of a magical place. He becomes a master in the art of interbreeding the ethnic rhythms of India, the Caribbean and North Africa mixed with electronica ...
| | Mariza Concerto Em Lisboa CD (2006) Bonus DVD
Alma Do Fado CD music
$15.09 It was perhaps time for the obligatory live album from fado's big new star, but this was more than a gig, it was a huge concert in Lisbon. Mariza cherry-picks material from her three albums, and there's some fine stuff to choose from on Concerto em Lisboa. Her usual sympathetic group is augmented by strings, but there's never any danger of them swamping the sound; the arrangements on material like "Menino do Barrio Negro" are so subtle and sublime that they color the edges of the piece instead, gently enhancing the mood. Mariza herself shows how well she's ...
| | Angry Samoans Live At Rhino Records CD (1990)
Alma Do Fado music CDs
$4.88
| | Lo Mejor De Lo Mejor: Baladas CDs (1999)
Alma Do Fado songs
$16.39 2 Cds
| | Ash Dargan Spirit Dreams CD (2005) (Import) Australia
Alma Do Fado album
$14.95
| | Marcela Morelo Morelo, Vol. 5 CD (2005)
Alma Do Fado CD music
$11.65
| | Michael Benjamin Mika CD (Import)
Alma Do Fado music CDs
$34.29
| | Mute Audio Documents CDs (2007)
Alma Do Fado songs
$111.79
| | Polynesian Chants CD (2007)
Alma Do Fado album
$18.59
| | Sergio Mendes Encanto CD (2008) Digipak
Alma Do Fado CD music
$15.65 When it came to popularizing Brazilian pop in America (and the world) during the 1960s, Sergio Mendes was in the forefront. While the torch has been passed on ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|