| | Europe Prisoners In Paradise CD - Import Europe Discography of CDs
Recorded at Enterprise Studios, Burbank, California. Originally released on Epic (45328). Includes liner notes by Europe.
Europe: Joey Tempest (vocals); Kee Marcello (guitar); Mic Michaeli (keyboards); John Leven (bass); Ian Haugland (drums).
Prisoners In Paradise Music Prisoners In Paradise Review
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Buy Prisoners In Paradise CD Purchase Prisoners In Paradise CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Procol Harum Whiter Shade Of Pale CD (1972) (Import) Germany
Prisoners In Paradise album
$18.25 Procol Harum's first album was originally released without the inclusion of "A Whiter Shade of Pale," a song that had been a monumental hit just before the LP appeared. In subsequent releases, the running order of the album was slightly changed and "Good Captain Clack" was omitted to make room for the hit that the public expected. ...
| | Lizzy Borden Menace To Society CD (1986)
Prisoners In Paradise CD music
$9.69 Lizzy Borden's second studio album, following the live The Murderess Metal Road Show by only a few months, is the band's career high point. A nice balance between the energetic but cliché-ridden pop-metal of its ...
| | W A S P K.F.D. CD (1997)
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$9.29
| | Whitesnake Come An Get It CD (Import) United Kingdom
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$13.15 Whitesnake, the pop-metal band featuring former Deep Purple singer David Coverdale, released the album COME AN' GET IT in 1981.
Despite the massive talents of vocalist David Coverdale and his supporting cast of musicians (not to mention the unimpeachable resumé of producer Martin Birch), Come an' Get It was another maddeningly average Whitesnake album. A thoroughly boring set that played it too safe and yielded no lasting live favorites, Come an' Get It was competent to the max -- in the hands of a debuting artist, it may have qualified as a classic -- but for a near-supergroup of such experience and pedigree, it instead smacked of severe underachievement. Rare highlights include the driving energy of "Hot Stuff," the lively bar-room piano of "Wine, Women and Song," and the wistful, acoustic balladry of "Till the Day I Die." But these share space with run-of-the-mill bluesy rockers like "Don't Break My Heart Again" and "Would I Lie to You" -- all of them hard to fault, but equally impossible to praise. Yawn! Even the quasi-epic "Child of Babylon" ...
| | Procol Harum Salty Dog CD (1969)
Prisoners In Paradise album
$16.29 A SALTY DOG...PLUS contains the complete 1969 original release plus 6 rare or previously unreleased bonus tracks.
This German import reissue is packaged in a digipak and contains the bonus track "Long Gone Geek."
Procol Harum, who reached an astounding peak with their 1967 debut, achieved further heights with each successive release up to A SALTY DOG, their ...
| | Kamelot Fourth Legacy CD (2000)
Prisoners In Paradise CD music
$10.45
| | Butthole Surfers Hairway To Steven CD (1988)
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$12.79
| | Best Of George Clinton CD (2000)
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$6.29
| | 5 6 7 8's Bomb The Rocks: Early Days Singles 1989 CD (2004)
Prisoners In Paradise album
$13.49 Released after their brief appearance in Quentin Tarantino's KILL BILL VOLUME ONE re-ignited interest in this Japanese female garage-punk trio, the 27-track anthology BOMB THE ROCKS gathers the entirety of all of the 5.6.7.8's' early singles and EPs, including the classic "Bomb the Twist."
This Japanese all-girl (except once, for a year or so) quartet-turned-trio is almost certainly best known for appearing in the Quentin Tarantino movie Kill Bill, Vol. 1, or maybe for licensing their song "Woo Hoo" in a commercial. This compilation contains "Woo Hoo," but that track's almost soft enough to be worthy of Shonen Knife, and not at all representative of the ladies at their best. The raucous countdown that opens the disc -- "10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 54321!" -- gives a much better indication of what the 5.6.7.8's do. They're a punky garage/rockabilly act who write songs like "She Was a Mau Mau," "Motor Cycle Go-Go-Go," "I Was a Teenage Cave Woman," and generally come off like a slightly less distortion-fixated, distaff version of Guitar Wolf. Frontwoman Ronnie Fujiyama's last name is fortuitous, because she's every bit as raw a rock & roll howler as Wanda Jackson, who famously sang "Fujiyama Mama." Her guitar skills aren't half bad either; she cranks it up to almost Link Wray levels of scorch, as her sister, Fujii Sachiko, slams the kit and bassist Omo throbs away. This is amped-up, three-chord rock & roll, sometimes with simple lyrics and other times instrumental (but still punctuated by high-pitched shrieks). The 5.6.7.8's ...
| | Moments In Grace Moonlight Survived CD (2004)
Prisoners In Paradise CD music
$5.95 For a band working within the flawed emo/post-hardcore construct that actually has something to offer -- namely Jeremy Griffith, their talented singer and principal songwriter -- Moments in Grace seem eager to wrap themselves in cliché. Rites of Spring reference or not, "Moments in Grace" is an interchangeable emo Mad Lib. It's a moniker in threes, preferably combining units of time or distance with pain, romance, or divinity themes. Moonlight Survived is utterly meaningless, yet immediately weighty; its cover art is appropriately murky. Then there are Griffith's lyrics, which stagnate into a blah mess of romantic fallout, soul-baring confession, and vaguely spiritual deep thoughts. "And I cry for the death of our dove"; "I gave you my last breath and you left me"; "I walked blindly toward the lifeless hell" -- is this rock music or a Deepak Chopra seminar? Griffith is tremendously expressive vocally, with a melancholy in his voice suggestive of British singers like Starsailor's James Walsh. But he's hindered by those clunky placeholder lyrics, and muddy Brian McTernan production. The veteran helmer (Thrice, Hot Water Music) has a vested interest in Moments in Grace, tapping them as the first signee to his Salad Days imprint (via Atlantic). But Moonlight Survived is mired in a foggy production lowland that either skews Grace toward their peers or broadcasts them through a reverb foghorn ("Broken Promises"). Except for the lyrics, the album is never really bad, particularly if you're a die-hard fan of the emo-influenced sound. But it suffers from overambition. While "Stratus"' shifts between urgent electric guitars and synth/strings atmospherics would work wonders for Styx, the song seems hopelessly melodramatic here. "The Blurring Lines of Loss" can't resist piling on the strings, either, nullifying the power of its tense lead guitar. "My Dying Day" gets it right, employing rousing percussion and ...
| | Gordon Giltrap Drifter CDs (2005)
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$15.19
| | Grand Magus Wolf's Return CD (2005)
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$13.85 In the 21st century, metal is full of bands that favor brutality for the sake of brutality -- bands ...
| | Remixed Susu CD (2006) (Import) Import
Prisoners In Paradise album
$28.89
| | Recoil Subhuman CD (2007)
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$12.25
| | Permanent Vacation CD (2003)
Prisoners In Paradise music CDs
$16.45
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