| | Missing Persons Back 2 Back Hits CD Missing Persons Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Missing Persons and the Motels are actually a good match for EMI-Capitol Special Markets' Back 2 Back Hits series. Both groups have dedicated fans, but many listeners only remember them for a handful of hits, and Back 2 Back Hits features those hits from both artists. All of Missing Persons' five charting singles -- "Words," "Destination Unknown," "Windows," "Walking in L.A.," and "Give" -- are here; the Motels' section contains all of their biggest hits -- "Only the Lonely," "Take the L," "Suddenly Last Summer," "Remember the Nights," and "Shame." For casual fans of both new wave groups, this is a fine way to acquire all these hits on one disc, although serious collectors of either group should stick with individual artist compilations. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine Missing Persons Back 2 Back Hits Songs | 1. | Destination Unknown | $1.29 | |
| 2. | Walking in L.A. | $1.29 | |
| 3. | Words  | $1.29 | |
| 4. | Windows | $0.99 | |
| 5. | Give - (CD only) | |
| 6. | Only the Lonely | |
| 7. | Suddenly Last Summer | |
| 8. | Remember the Nights | |
| 9. | Shame | |
| 10. | Take the L - (CD only) | |
| Back 2 Back Hits Music Review Purchase Back 2 Back Hits CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Best Of Missing Persons CD (1987)
Back 2 Back Hits album
$8.85 This posthumous greatest hits compilation ...
| | Expose Greatest Dance Mixes CD (2002)
Back 2 Back Hits CD music
$9.09 America's so-called "party label," Thump Records, compiles Greatest Dance Mixes, a collection of late-'80s dance-pop group Exposé's best-known songs. Note, however, that the versions of the songs appearing on this compilation aren't the well-known versions of the songs but rather the remixes. In most cases, the remixes are rather similar to the better-known single version, being extended 12" mixes for the most part. Only in a few cases, such as the "White Label Club Remix" of "Tell Me Why" or the "Atomic Mix" of "What You Don't Know," do the remixes differ drastically. In addition to mixes of such hits as "Seasons Change," ...
| | David Bowie Best Of Bowie CDs (2002) Bonus CD; Remastered; 2 CDS
Back 2 Back Hits music CDs
$19.49 This edition of BEST OF BOWIE will only be available 12.2.2003-3.31.2004.
Ably serving as a substitute for the excellent but out-of-print collection BOWIE: THE SINGLES 1969-1993, the two-CD BEST OF BOWIE serves as an outstanding career-spanning retrospective featuring material from as recent as 2002. Above all reflecting the visionary aptitude of a restless creative genius who switched into different musical guises the way some people change suits, these 38 cuts trace David Bowie's path from space-rock folkie ("Space Oddity") and glam god ("Ziggy Stardust") to blue-eyed soulster ("Young Americans"), and cutting-edge futurist ("Fashion").
21st-century kids might be aware of Bowie via covers by Nirvana ("The Man Who Sold The World") or the Wallflowers ("Heroes"), but it's equally likely they've heard playlist war-horses like '80s alt-pop classics "Let's Dance," "Modern Love," and "China Girl." Not to be missed are this icon's stellar collaborations with a wide range of talent including John Lennon ("Fame"), Queen ("Under Pressure"), ...
| | Don't Look Back: Very Best Of The Korgis CD (2003)
Back 2 Back Hits songs
$22.55
| | Gregory Abbott Rhyme & Reason CD (2006)
Back 2 Back Hits album
$7.99
| | Joe Bonamassa Sloe Gin CD (2007)
Back 2 Back Hits CD music
$13.79
| | Zakarya CD (2001)
Back 2 Back Hits music CDs
$14.69
| | Heavenly Versus Satan CD (1991)
Back 2 Back Hits songs
$13.15 Heavenly's first album is a remarkable maturation of Talulah Gosh's old manic guitar strum. The melodies are every bit as peppy, but the shambolic chaos is transformed into a sound that, while still jumpy and loose, is much more restrained and sweetly melodic. Similarly, singer Amelia Fletcher's vocals are still cute and girlish, but she's learned a lot more about the concept of pitch, and she's well on her way to becoming one of the most influential singers on the '90s indie pop scene. Heavenly Vs. Satan is considerably less sophisticated than Heavenly's later albums would become (keyboardist Cathy ...
| | D O A Greatest Shits CD (2005) (Import) Canada
Back 2 Back Hits album
$13.09
| | Now Everything Police Police CD (2006)
Back 2 Back Hits CD music
$9.65
| | Justin Shane One Last Wish CD (2006)
Back 2 Back Hits music CDs
$10.15
| | Buck Owens: Live From Austin Texas CD (2007) Digipak
Back 2 Back Hits songs
$12.15 According to the Bakersfield master himself, Buck Owens was once watching Dwight Yoakam on Austin City Limits in the mid-'80s when the budding country star dedicated his whole set to Owens. Moved, Owens met Yoakam and found himself inspired to return to the stage almost a decade after quitting the music business. One of these comeback shows is captured on this fantastic DVD as part of the venerable LIVE FROM AUSTIN TX series and features Yoakam duetting with his mentor on "Under Your Spell Again."
The time off clearly did Owens good: he seems as spry as ever on this 11-song set (also recorded for Austin City Limits). He tears through a set of all his major hits, including "Tiger By the Tail," "Act Naturally," "Together ...
| | 451, Matt Jorgensen + Another Morning CD (2008)
Back 2 Back Hits album
$12.89 Despite the greats who spent time developing their craft in Seattle during a previous era (Ray Charles, Quincy Jones), today's Seattle jazz scene is a relatively young one compared to other, more established sounds. As such, perhaps it's fitting that fusion can play a part in it from time to time. Drummer Matt Jorgensen is one of those at the forefront of the fusion movement within the area, putting jazz and rock aesthetics together fluidly without focusing on fusion itself, and not coming across as heavy-handed as a result. This is effortless fusion: jazzers who happen to have a head for rock chord progressions; rockers who happen to inhabit jazz but veer away from the thrashing that fusion often devolves into. This is not the guitar-heavy sound of John McLaughlin-era fusion, with its electronic buzz. The only electronics here come in the form of Ryan Burns' organ playing. Even though there are covers of the Beatles and Neil Young here (which are both excellent), the real standouts are the ...
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