| | Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan CD Jeff The Drunk Discography of CDs
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan Music Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan Songs | 1. | Takin' Care Of Business |
| 2. | Rock & Roll All Nite |
| 3. | Rockin' Robin |
| 4. | (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction |
| 5. | Always On My Mind |
| 6. | Born To Be Wild |
| 7. | Jeff Speaks |
| 8. | Margaritaville |
| 9. | Okie From Muskogee |
| 10. | I Got You Babe |
| 11. | Jeff Speaks (Part 2) |
| 12. | God Bless The U.S.A. |
| 13. | New York, New York |
| 14. | Jeff Speaks (Part 3) |
| 15. | When Irish Eyes Are Smiling |
| 16. | Jeff The Drunk Takes Manhattan |
| Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan Review
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Purchase Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Flaco Jimenez Ay Te Dejo En San Antonio Y Mas! CD (1986)
Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan album
$14.49 Lyrics translated from the Spanish by Guillermo Hernandaz, Yolanda Zepeda and Jaime Nicolopulos.
Following on from his father Santiago Jimenez' own successful run as a conjunto musician in San Antonio, Flaco Jimenez put together a conjunto of his own in the '50s, eventually becoming one of the most famous figures in Tex-Mex music (also known as Musica Nortena in Mexico). Based on the polkas and waltzes Mexican performers refashioned as rancheras, the Tex-Mex conjunto style features accordion, the 12-string bajo sexto guitar, bass, and drums. Flaco immediately staked his claim in the music with a distinctly imaginative and lively accordion style, finding the ideal backing from equally able Tejano musicians, including his father and his son David. ...
| | Phil Alvin County Fair 2000 CD (1994)
Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan CD music
$10.69 Brothers Phil and Dave Alvin were the heart of California roots-rockers the Blasters. After songwriter/guitarist Dave's departure for a solo career, Phil kept the group alive, but mostly on a local performance level, not as a recording unit. He released his first solo album in 1986, but it took him eight years to make another.
Like its predecessor, COUNTY FAIR finds Phil Alvin backed by a shifting cast of characters, exploring an eclectic batch of American roots ...
| | Best Of Roger Miller: His Greatest Songs CD (1991)
Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan music CDs
$5.85
| | Ramones All The Stuff (And More), Vol. 1 CD (1990)
Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan songs
$12.79 Exploding into the stale vacuum of music in 1976 were four lads from the working-class burg known as Queens, New York: The Ramones! Projecting non-image as image, the Ramones invented worlds with every new song, populating their fantasies with characters like Sheena The Punk Rocker and Suzy The Headbanger. They were successful simply because they knew how to write great rock & roll--all energy, swagger and bravado; no solos, no chops, and no classical themes sprucing up concept albums.
Though Joey Ramone's lyrical concerns often focus on horror movies, there's a song for every occasion, whether you want to sniff some glue, score some horse on "53rd & 3rd," or make out with a "Babysitter." The story goes that The Ramones were originally going to play covers, but discovered it was easier to just write their own songs. In truth, they wrote maybe one or two tunes, then re-wrote them and re-wrote them, creating albums of minimalist anthems and universes out of the same few chords and themes. Keep listening, ...
| | Cry Baby CD (1990) Original Soundtrack
Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan album
$6.49 John Waters' Cry-Baby goes hand in hand with Hairspray, and is a musical film that will probably appeal more to Waters' fans than fans of musical cinema. There is nothing original or exciting about the music on the soundtrack, as energetic as it is, and its bizarre nature is probably due to the scenes from the film rather than its own oddities. Waters describes it as "music that proved kids knew how to be bad before sex, drugs, and rock & roll," yet there seems to be little separation between those attributes and the concoction of lust and loudness here. Songs like "Doin' Time for Bein' Young" and "High School Hellcats" are no different from rock & roll, except that they sound like weak imitations of songs from Grease. Waters, ...
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Jeff The Drunk: Takes Manhattan CD music
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