| | Wheatus Too Soon Monsoon CD Wheatus Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
On Too Soon Monsoon, Wheatus' third full-length, self-production and engineering brings even the hugest pop melody right back down to earth. This would be a detriment to most bands, but it somehow makes Wheatus' music even more immediate, because Brendan B. Brown writes these intensely personal songs that combine stories of tough love in the 21st century with bittersweet childhood memories of bike ramp crushes and the general minutiae of music obsessive's life. "The sound of American radio's making me feel like I just killed my mom and my dad," he sings in "In the Melody," while "BMX Bandits" is a fuzzy guitar pop fantasy about foxy Diamondback bike riders. Meanwhile in "Hometown," Brown's gentle rumination on 9/11, he avoids melodrama by recounting the tragedy in the context of a personal relationship with the twin towers. ("I told her that they reminded me of Motown '60s skinny ties....") The rousing choruses of these songs, alongside the same in "London Sun," "Desperate Songs," and "I Am What I Is," reveal a songwriter and band unconcerned with their past major-label woes, or even with sounding professional, since "professional" can also mean too slick. Yes, they just long to be close to you, drawing on 1980s power pop and the sweet cynicism of the Eels to make a record that often rings winsome in its lyrics but has some really sturdy songwriting under the surface. Don't let Wheatus' ho-hum cover art or unassuming production style fool you -- Too Soon Monsoon is a pop gem, and it's made to be heard. ~ Johnny Loftus
Unknown Contributor Role: Nicolas DiPierro.
Wheatus: Brendan Brown (vocals, guitar); Elizabeth Brown (vocals); Mike McCabe (bass guitar); Peter Brown (drums); Shannon Harris, Kathryn E. Froggatt, Nicolas DiPierro.
Personnel: Kathryn E. Froggatt (vocals, tambourine); Megan Milanese, Mike McCabe, Michael Bellar (vocals); Shannon Harris (keyboards); Mark Redhead (bells).
Wheatus Too Soon Monsoon Songs Too Soon Monsoon Music Review Purchase Too Soon Monsoon CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Bob Dylan Christmas In The Heart CD (2009)
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| | Shakira She Wolf CD (2009)
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$11.18 Last time around, Shakira touched upon so many styles she couldn't be contained on one album, splitting Oral Fixation in two. This time, she focuses on one sound only: a pulsating electro-disco that crosses all boundaries and welcomes all nationalities. Such ...
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| | Swirlies They Spent Their Wild Youthful Days In The Glittering World Of The Salons CD (1996)
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| | Joe "King" Carrasco Tales From The Crypt: Basement Tapes 1979 CD (1984)
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| | Dusty Springfield Everything's Coming Up Dusty CD (1965) (Import) Germany
Too Soon Monsoon album
$10.49 This rereleased album from the famed vocalist features eight bonus tracks.
Dusty Springfield's second British LP was roughly equivalent to the American You Don't Have to Say You Love Me album, which appeared ten months later in the United States and had the title hit and one other song ("Little by Little") added, and three of the U.K. edition's songs stripped off. The British version also appeared as a gatefold, filled with a series of beautiful photographs and extensive notes. More to the point, this second album presented a more mature Dusty Springfield, doing songs by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley, Randy Newman and co., although all of the material here -- even "Who Can I Turn To," from the musical The Roar of the Greasepaint -- still has a soulful edge. Moreover, she scales new heights of passion on Rod Argent's "If It Don't Work Out" and the ethereal "That's How Heartaches Are Made," and seems close to bursting her lungs on Gerry Goffin and Carole King's "I ...
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Too Soon Monsoon album
$16.45 Leon Mobley is the founder, artistic and musical director of Da Lion and Djimbe West African Drummers and Dancers. He began to play African drum rhythms in 1976 and studied for ten years with Nigerian master drummer Babatunde Olatunji at the Elma Lewis School of Fine Arts in Boston, MA. In 1977, Leon joined Bokan-deye under the directorship of Senegalese master drummer Ibrahim Camara, former drummer for the National Ballet of Senegal, and it was from this foundation that Leon began traveling the world in search of rhythm and its teachings. In 1981, Leon went to study and perform in Surinam, South America and Trinidad, West Indies, Senegal and Gambia in 1982, Japan in 1987 and 1992, South Africa in 1991 and 1992, Germany in 1995 and Italy and Israel in 1996.Leon has had theatrical ...
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Too Soon Monsoon CD music
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| | Super Stolie When I Grow Up CD (2009)
Too Soon Monsoon music CDs
$12.15 After more than a decade performing music professionally, 30-year old Chicago songwriter, Stolie has directed her wit to a new demographic, and under a new moniker. The non-cape-wearing Super Stolie celebrates the humility and hilarity of life in songs for KIDS! When I Grow Up, her fourth solo album, but first collection of children’s songs, features 11 original ditties like "Two Minutes" about how long to brush your teeth and "Kitties and Dogs," a rocker encouraging the adoption of pets so that our dreams of one day becoming veterinarians can be fulfilled. You'll also hear “The Unicorn,” written by Shel Silverstein and “Don’t Worry, Be Happy,” the all-vocal song written by Bobby McFerrin and a #1 single from the late 1980’s.When Super Stolie first began playing shows for kids -- at fundraisers and birthday parties -- she found ways to add twists to popular traditional songs; perhaps Old MacDonald also had a jungle? Inevitably, the songwriter’s own clever material began to emerge. The songs on When I Grow Up talk of exploring Chicago’s many attractions, rapping your name, traveling on an escalator, describing what you see in the sky, peanut butter preferences, and just generally being happy about life!For the album, Super Stolie performs on guitar, piano, bass, djembe, harmonica, tambourine, and of course singing! But listen closely, and you might also hear her clapping ...
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