| | David Hasselhoff Sings America CD - Import David Hasselhoff Discography of CDs
Sings America Review
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Purchase Sings America CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Gov't Mule By A Thread CD (2009)
Sings America
$12.29 Personnel: Warren Haynes (vocals, guitar); Danny Louis (keyboards); Matt Abts (drums, percussion). Audio Mixers: Gordie Johnson; Warren Haynes. BY A THREAD is Gov't Mule's first studio album since HIGH & MIGHTY was issued in 2006. Since that time, bassist Andy Hess has been replaced by Jorgen Carlsson, though Hess appears on two tracks at the end of the album. Carlsson's playing style is much more aggressive than Hess', and is therefore closer - in spirit anyway - to Gov't Mule's original bassist, the late Allen Woody, though he possesses an adventurous sense of time and is harmonically more colorful than either ...
| | Creed Full Circle CD (2009) Digipak
Sings America
$13.59
| | Backtracks CDs (2009) With DVD; Box Set
Sings America
$31.70
| | Michael Jackson - Video Greatest Hits - History V. 2: On Film DVD (1997)
Sings America
$9.69
| | Journey Greatest Hits CD (1988) Bonus Track; Remastered; Digipak
Sings America
$9.29 Journey: Steve Perry (vocals); Neal Schon (guitar); Gregg Rolie, Jonathan Cain (keyboards); Ross Valory, Randy Jackson (bass); Steve Smith, Aynsley Dunbar, Larrie Londin (drums). Producers: Mike Stone, Roy Thomas Baker, Steve Perry, Geoffrey Workman, Kevin Elson. This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players. Journey: Steve Perry (vocals); ...
| | Kings Of Leon Only By The Night CD (2008)
Sings America
$10.19 Kings of Leon: Caleb Followill (vocals, guitar); Matthew Followill (guitar, background vocals); Jared Followill (bass instrument, background vocals); Nathan Followill (drums, background vocals). Personnel: Jacquire King , Angelo Petraglia (keyboards). Audio Mixer: Jacquire King . Recording information: Blackbird Studio, Nashville, TN. With their raw, organic sound, Tennessee's Kings of Leon emerged in 2003 as Southern rock for the indie-garage set, sort ...
| | Shellac Terraform CD (1998)
Sings America
$12.95 2nd Release,Recorded In '95 ...
| | James Taylor CD (1968)
Sings America
$12.19 Live Recording
Personnel includes: James Taylor (vocals, guitar, percussion, hand claps); Richard Hewson (conductor); Mick Wayne (guitar); Skaila Kanga (harp); Don Schinn (electric piano, harpsichord, organ); Freddie Redd (organ); Louis Cennamo, Paul McCartney (bass); Bishop O'Brien (drums, percussion); Peter Asher (tamborine, percussion, hand claps, background vocals); Aeolian String Quartet, Amici String Quartet. Recorded at Trident Studios, London, England from July to October 1968. Includes liner notes by Steve Kolanjian. James Taylor was the first artist to be signed to record on the Beatles' short-lived vanity Apple label. In late 1968, Taylor's sophisticated self-titled disc foreshadowed the introspective singer/songwriter genre that dominated pop music in the early and mid-'70s. Although often touted as his debut, this release is chronologically Taylor's second studio outing. James Taylor and the Original Flying Machine -- an EP recorded a year earlier -- contains rudimentary versions of much of the same original material found here. The album is presented with two distinct sides. The first, in essence, presents a unified multi-song suite incorporating several distinctly Baroque-flavored links connecting the larger compositions. The second is a more traditional collection of individual tunes. This unique juxtaposition highlights Taylor's highly personal and worldly lyrics within a multidimensional layer of surreal and otherwise ethereal instrumentation. According to Taylor, much of the album's subject matter draws upon personal experience. This is a doubled-edged blessing because the emphasis placed on the pseudo-blues "Knocking 'Round the Zoo" and the numerous other references made to Taylor's brief sojourn in a mental institution actually do a disservice to the absolutely breathtaking beauty inherent in every composition. Several pieces ...
| | Orbital In Sides CDs (1996)
Sings America
$9.09 Initial pressings of IN SIDES contain a bonus disc with five extra tracks, including a 28-minute version of "The Box." "The Box" and "Out There Somewhere?" are contained on two tracks each. Orbital: Paul Hartnoll, Phil Hartnoll. Additional personnel: Auntie (vocals); Clune (drums). In Sides isn't Orbital's best album, or their most accomplished, but it is the most definitive. It pulses with the energy of the debut, the lush flow of the second, and the conceptual theme of Snivilisation. The focus this time, though, is ecology. "The Girl With the Sun in Her Head" was recorded on a Greenpeace bus using only solar power, and "Dwr Budr" (Welsh ...
| | Bananarama Very Best Of CD (2002) (Import) United Kingdom
Sings America
$12.65
| | Atari Teenage Riot Redefine The Enemy CD (2002)
Sings America
$13.59
| | Harris Best Of The Best CD (2004)
Sings America
$6.59
| | Skindred Babylon CD (2004)
Sings America
$9.19 Skindred: Benji Webbe (vocals); Mikey Dee (guitar); Danite Pea (bass); Dirty Arya (drums). Recorded at Bay 7 Studios, Valley Village, California; Sparky Dark Studios, Calabasas, California. Skindred: Mikey Demus (guitar); Daniel Pugsley (bass guitar, programming); Benji Webbe, Dirty Arya. Personnel: Benji Webbe (vocals); Mikey Dee (guitar); Howard Benson (keyboards); Dirty Arya (drums). Audio Mixers: Andrew Goldman; Rick "Soldier" Will; Jason Bieler. Creators: Benji Webbe; Ginge. Photographer: F. Scott Schafer. By the early 2000s, crossing rap and rock's respective DNA strands was no longer a bold experiment. From Faith No More and Shootyz Groove to Korn and 311, hip-hop had been hailing hardcore and metal and funk, and everything else, on an open radio frequency for a decade or more. But what about it? Sure, the sound was familiar to kids raised on equal parts Yo! MTV Raps and Headbangers Ball. But by 2003, homogeneousness was floating bad checks neither genre could cash. Into this big blasé world comes Babylon, the venom-spitting, pit-baiting debut from Skindred. Emerging from the ashes of Dub War, Benji Webbe and company eschew that band's fetish for freely shifting sounds, in favor of a more focused ragga-rap-metal attack. It's not merely a facsimile of last year's money-making metal model. No, what little repetition does exist here comes from the dancehall influence, the harping and chatting over a nonstop groove. "Pressure" and "Nobody" rock ragged, near-atonal guitar riffs over percussion, emulating both the stop-start hesitation of drum'n'bass and metal's monolithic pound. As the guitars whine, Benji becomes a one-man vocal force, his flow twisting between trippy ragga phraseology and a grating thrash scream. Scratchy drum programming and some non-intrusive synths set up the silky, chatty verses of "Selector," before a skuzzy power slide breakdown energizes its air-raid marathon chorus. With all these stylistic tongues tittering at once, Babylon often threatens to topple over. What's amazing -- especially in the complacent rap-metal landscape it finds itself rampaging over -- is that it never does. Skindred doesn't seem to consciously want the reinvention tag; it has simply tapped into the same lack of pretension that fueled Korn and Living Colour's Vivid -- records that were made visionary by an unadulterated honesty ...
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