| | Barbra Streisand Guilty Pleasures CD Barbra Streisand Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other.
Twenty-five years after GUILTY, Barbra Streisand's runaway hit record with Barry Gibb, the duo reunited for 2005's GUILTY PLEASURES. While living up to that pop classic is a tall order, Streisand and Gibb are wonderful here, easing through breezy, uplifting tunes that are sure to please fans of both artists.
Babs sounds remarkably assured throughout GUILTY PLEASURES, undoubtedly due, at least in part, to working once again with Gibb, who knows how to elicit some of her finest, most pop-perfect performances. Although Gibb (who co-produced this disc with John Merchant) is credited with two duets on the record (the yearning "Come Tomorrow" and "Above the Law," an ode to deception), he's at his best when providing his signature high-pitched backing vocals and letting Streisand's powerful singing take center stage, as on the immediately catchy "Stranger in a Strange Land," the surprisingly club-ready "Night of My Life," and the vintage Bee Gees track "(Our Love) Don't Throw It All Away." Though GUILTY PLEASURES is aptly named, its unabashedly fun, fluffy atmosphere makes it that much more enjoyable.
This dualdisc featuring duets with Barry Gibb, includes a CD side with the complete album, and a DVD side with the entire album in PCM Stereo, video features including footage of the making of the album and interviews with Barbara and Barry on the making of the album, and 4 complete video performances.
Personnel: Barbra Streisand (vocals); Barry Gibb (vocals, guitar); Dan Warner (guitars); Doug Emery (keyboards, programming); Julio Hernandez (bass guitar); Lee Levin (drums); Richard Bravo (percussion). Barbra Streisand Guilty Pleasures Songs Guilty Pleasures Music Review Purchase Guilty Pleasures CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Bryan Adams So Far So Good CD (1993)
Guilty Pleasures album
$11.49 SO FAR SO GOOD (AND MORE) includes 9 previously unreleased videos.
By 1993, when Bryan Adams released his first collection of greatest hits, he had enjoyed 12 years in the music business during a span that had seen hot trends like new wave and late '80s hair metal fall by the wayside. Adams managed to stay popular by sticking with an ear-pleasing brand of rock & roll that veered between edgy, bar-band style riff rock to more earnest, American-style roots rock in the tradition of Bruce Springsteen and Bob Seger.
SO FAR SO GOOD gathers all the essential Adams ...
| | Very Best Of The Fortunes (1967-1972) CD (1995)
Guilty Pleasures CD music
$7.75 Digitally remastered by Ron Furmanek (1995, Tower Mastering , Hollywood, California).
Fans of Birmingham, England's Merseybeat/British Invasion quintet the Fortunes who are looking for a definitive best-of will have to keep looking, but for the money, this lovingly crafted collection from the Taragon label does pretty well for itself. Focusing on the late-'60s/early-'70s output from the group, The Very Best of the Fortunes (1967-1972) may not contain "You've Got Your Troubles" (the band's most recognizable single), "Caroline," "Here ...
| | Miracles Collection CD (2002)
Guilty Pleasures music CDs
$8.79 The 18-track ...
| | Bryan Adams Best Of Me CD (2001)
Guilty Pleasures songs
$11.99
| | England Dan Nights Are Forever CD (1976)
Guilty Pleasures album
$9.69 Nights Are Forever was the breakthrough album for Dan Seals and John Coley after some sincere and excellent work on A&M Records in the early '70s. Two of their biggest hits were the title track and the beautiful "I'd Really Love to See You Tonight." Those songs are a good indication of the fine performances this 1976 album contains. The duo's originals like "Long Way Home" and the Dan Fogelberg-ish "Westward Wind" could have been hits as well displaying superb musicianship and delicate vocals. This album is very much a companion piece to the Parker McGee album recorded around the same time, on the same label, with pretty much the same musicians. Producer Kyle Lehning has the sounds so similar a survey panel would probably not be able to figure out which song came from which album. What Nights Are Forever has that the Parker McGee album does not is "There'll Never Be Another For Me," a song co-written by Parker McGee, England Dan, and John Ford Coley -- it is a rare look at what a perfect synergy these musicians have, and ...
| | England Dan Some Things Don't Come Easy CD (1978)
Guilty Pleasures CD music
$9.69 If Dowdy Ferry Road was their bleak moment in song, Some Things Don't Come Easy is the calm before the storm, a port prior to the schizophrenia that was Dr. Heckyll and Mr. Jive. Wandering songs like "Who's Lonely Now" are indicative of this album, and it is only one of two titles the singers pen together. They look alike on the smiling, happy airbrushed front cover, but you can almost see sadness in their eyes on the photos on the back. It must have been an intense period as they came up with yet another Top Ten hit, their fifth of six. "We'll Never Have to Say Goodbye Again" was written by Jeffrie Comanor and is far and away the best song on the album. This duo knew how to interpret; they were fantastic at it. The hit single is defined, the production is compact, and the loose ends that make up all the other songs on Some Things Don't Come Easy pale in comparison. The song's hook and instrumentation are so radio-friendly that the 45 could be put on repeat and after the 30th spin not bore like many of the tracks ...
| | Promise Ring Nothing Feels Good CD (1997)
Guilty Pleasures music CDs
$11.59
| | Elton John Rock Of The Westies CD (1975) Remastered
Guilty Pleasures songs
$6.75 Digitally remastered by Tony Cousins (Metropolis Mastering, London, England).
When Elton John went into the studio to record ROCK OF THE WESTIES, he did it with a revamped line-up. Davey Johnstone and Ray Cooper stayed on while Dee Murray and Nigel Olsson were replaced by Kenny Passarelli and Roger Pope respectively. Also added to the band were old mate Caleb Quaye and synthesizer player James Newton Howard, whose keyboard talents combined with John's and considerably broadened the unit's sound. WESTIES found EJ sounding revitalized after scoring seven consecutive top five hits in the preceding two years (The tropical-flavored "Island Girl" kept the streak alive by ending up at number one).
With the Bernie Taupin/Elton John juggernaut creating up-tempo numbers such as "Grow Some Funk Of Your Own" and "Street Kids," the new band played with such magical synergy that even oddly titled numbers "I Feel Like A Bullet (In The Gun Of Robert Ford)" and "Billy Bones And The White Bird" had their own quirky appeal. Although most of this record is fairly obscure, ROCK OF THE WESTIES is a sprightly collection often overshadowed amidst better-known albums like TUMBLEWEED CONNECTION and HONKY CHATEAU.
Less than four months after issuing the landmark and autobiographical Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy (1975), Elton John re-emerged with a new band and a slightly modified sound. However, the departure of Dee Murray (bass) and Nigel Olsson (drums) would ultimately begin ...
| | Greensleeves Rhythm Album Vol. 7: Lightning CD (2000) (Import) United Kingdom
Guilty Pleasures album
$15.89
| | Alex Hood Me & More Friends CD (2006) (Import) Import; Australia
Guilty Pleasures CD music
$17.09
| | Triumvirat Old Loves Die Hard CD (1976) Import; Remastered
Guilty Pleasures music CDs
$12.79
| | Bet E & Stef Band Day By Day CD (2002)
Guilty Pleasures songs
$26.79
| | Colorsound Higher Station CD (2004)
Guilty Pleasures album
$13.69 Colorsound: Matthew J. Tow.
| | Au Revoir Simone Bird Of Music CD (2007)
Guilty Pleasures CD music
$10.95
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