| | Mikoto CD Mikoto Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $6.65 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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Mikoto: Ray Harkins (vocals); Martin Diaz, Matt Moody (guitar); Kelly Orr (electric bass); Dan Tracy (drums). Mikoto Songs | 1. | Blessed Are the Broken |
| 2. | Cold Fusion |
| 3. | Falling Between the Cracks |
| 4. | Tired of Me |
| 5. | Traditional Anthem |
| Mikoto Review
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Purchase Mikoto CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Killing The Dream In Place, Apart CD (2005)
Mikoto album
$11.45
| | As Hope Dies Birthplace And Burial Site CD (2002)
Mikoto CD music
$9.79
| | Steve Morse Out Standing In Their Field CD (2009)
Mikoto music CDs
$11.18
| | Procol Harum Procol's Ninth CD (1975) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Mikoto songs
$11.65
| | Chickenfoot CD (2009) Digipak
Mikoto album
$12.79
| | Slayer World Painted Blood CD (2009)
Mikoto CD music
$10.39
| | Jam Setting Sons CD (1979)
Mikoto music CDs
$13.59 Britain's a funny place, but not always in the literal sense. While apparently placid on the surface, in reality England has always had issues with class, race, and socio-political turmoil. In 1980 Margaret Thatcher had taken power as Prime Minister, and the youth culture that had usually reserved its disdain for the dominant Labor party had a compelling new target. Not so coincidentally, in 1980 The Jam released SETTING SONS, their strongest and most political album to date.
If The Jam's first three albums are a tribute to the resiliency of British working class youth, SETTING SONS is a call to arms. In the context of politically informed songs such as "Eton Rifles'" and "Burning Sky," even a cover of the Motown chestnut "Heatwave" seems to take on political connotations. The albums centerpiece, the haunting mini-epic "Little Boy Soldiers" leaves no doubt as to the intensity of Weller's ire, with its sarcastic references to shooting to kill for "Queen and country," and lambasting of United States support for Thatcher ("God's on our side and so is Washington"). Luckily the usual Weller hooks are there as well, so it's safe to hum along even without knowing what the fuss is all about.
The Jam's Setting Sons was originally planned as a concept album about three childhood friends who, upon meeting after some time apart, discover the different directions in which they've grown apart. Only about half of the songs ended up following the concept due to a ...
| | Crossfade CD (2004)
Mikoto songs
$8.99
| | Frank Black Francis CDs (2004)
Mikoto album
$14.69
| | Nuns CD (1980)
Mikoto CD music
$19.15 This is the classic debut LP by original San Francisco punks The Nuns! Although The Nuns, led by Alejandro Escovedo (future Rank & File) and Jennifer Miro (Debbie Harry's West Coast counterpart), ruled the San Francisco punk scene in the late '70s, court
San Francisco punks the Nuns are remembered today -- if at all -- as the first blip on Alejandro Escovedo's ...
| | Modest Mouse Good News For People Who Love Bad News CD (2004) DualDisc
Mikoto music CDs
$15.69 This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other.
The Dirty Dozen Brass Band offers the opening fanfare for Modest Mouse's sixth full-length, GOOD NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO LIKE BAD NEWS, a fitting intro for the outfit's most majestic record to date. On their prior major-label recordings, the (formerly) indie icons opted for ...
| | Road Work Ahead On The Road Again CD (2004)
Mikoto songs
$17.75 The roots of Road Work Ahead stretch all the way back to the simpler days of 1980. Bob Magnusson was living and gigging in Los Angeles and had a record deal with Albert Marx's Discovery Records label. Bob had already done one album as a leader and was leaning into his second project. He rounded up pianist Bill Mays, San Diego drummer Jim Plank, and myself and we rehearsed through some of his tunes. The next stop was a Hollywood recording studio where we laid down the tracks and Bob titled the album "Road Work Ahead" featuring the Bob Magnusson Quartet. The music chosen for the recording were four of Bob's originals plus a Bill Mays tune and an early Russell Ferrante composition. The direction of the group had some inherent electricity and because of not only the musical ESP that took place but also the human interactive ESP, we decided to continue on, form a band, and call ourselves Road Work Ahead. The idea was free advertising courtesy of Caltrans and the hopes of taking the band out on the road.We were four friends, all fully engaged in music, all composing tunes for the group, and all dealing with extensive freeway drive time. Bob and Bill lived in L.A. and Jim and I lived in San Diego. We'd do a hit in Hollywood, Jim and I would sleep under Bill's piano in his house in Studio City, and then after the following evenings gig we'd drive back in the middle of the night, struggling the whole way to stay awake. There are parts of that equation that I'm happy to leave behind. But the music itself was priceless.We went on to record as a group on two of my Xanadu album projects (The Path and Bird Raga), two more Road Work Ahead records (Night and Day and Two Generations of Music), a KCET TV show called Road Work Ahead Performs Four by Four with Shelly Manne as the host, and many concerts throughout the United States. Leonard Feather wrote about us in the L.A. Times "Another splendid set... this music, halfway between be-bop and the Avante Garde, bears extended listening..."In the late 1980's Bill Mays moved to New York City and this marked a big change for the band. Bill had been immersed in the L.A. recording studio scene and really wanted to break away from that world of tense details and morph into the reality of a jazz pianist playing music in real time. New York is the center for this direction and Bill eased right in. The huge distance between Bill's East Coast home and our San Diego contingent pretty much halted our Road Work Ahead exploits for awhile. We resurfaced as a group in 1997 and did an inspired show at the Bella Via in Cardiff and garnered a great review in the San Diego Union. Six more years passed by and in January of 2003 Bill was circling through San Diego (his folks live here) and had a couple of days free. I called up the rest of the gang, booked a Sunday afternoon hit at Dizzy's (they had just scored a good acoustic piano), and broke out the book of tunes that we used to play to plan what musical vistas we might visit this time around. The concert was a wonderful success and Bill, Jim, Bob, and I vowed to make an effort to do more Road Working ahead. The telepathy and pathos that was ...
| | Matt Weston Rashaya CD (2007)
Mikoto album
$6.69 Matt Weston plays percussion and electronics, and has performed throughout the US and in Europe. He has appeared on CNN, VH1, and CBS TV.He has studied ...
| | Stanley Clarke School Days CD (1976)
Mikoto CD music
$5.95 Every pro electric-bass player and their mothers wore out the grooves of this record when it first came out, trying to cop Clarke's speedy, thundering, slapped-thumb bass licks. Yet ultimately, it was Clarke's rapidly developing compositional skills that made this album so listenable and so ...
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