| | Piss Ant Your Best Sucks CD Piss Ant Discography of CDs
Piss Ant: Josi Kat (vocals); Dave Foster (guitar, background vocals); Amy Brandt (bass guitar, background vocals); Jeff Duarte (drums, background vocals).
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Piss Ant Your Best Sucks Songs | 1. | Monkey |
| 2. | To Think I Thought |
| 3. | Enemy |
| 4. | Bonnie & Clyde |
| 5. | Silence |
| 6. | Whips & Chains |
| 7. | Devil in My Backyard |
| 8. | Wasted |
| 9. | Your Best Sucks |
| 10. | Trouble |
| 11. | Shark Attack |
| 12. | Don't You |
| 13. | Pull |
| Your Best Sucks Review
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Purchase Your Best Sucks CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Gov't Mule By A Thread CD (2009)
Your Best Sucks album
$12.29 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 Since that time, bassist Andy Hess has been replaced by Jorgen Carlsson, though Hess appears on two tracks at the end of the album.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 Woody or Hess. Carlsson and drummer Matt Abst are a solid match, since Abst is a drummer used to shifting time signatures and allowing the unexpected in while still driving a band. The band's keyboardist and rhythm guitarist, Danny Louis, is a shape-shifter, playing to whatever is needed in a given track. His manner of coloring sounds inside and around a particular tune's framework is a large part of what makes Gov't Mule's sound so fresh here - despite the fact that they ...
| | Creed Full Circle CD (2009) Digipak
Your Best Sucks CD music
$13.59
| | Michael Jackson - Video Greatest Hits - History V. 2: On Film DVD (1997)
Your Best Sucks music CDs
$9.69
| | Backtracks CDs (2009) With DVD; Box Set
Your Best Sucks songs
$31.70
| | Beatles The White Album CDs (1968) Limited Edition; Remastered; Digipak; Enhanced CD
Your Best Sucks album
$20.99 Each copy of this ...
| | Robin Trower Seven Moons Live CD (2009)
Your Best Sucks CD music
$12.89
| | Luiz Bonfa Bonfa Magic CD (1992)
Your Best Sucks music CDs
$10.65 This is the Brazilian composer/guitarist's first album in 30 years.
This recording is one of the first results of a licensing deal with the Caj label with a focus on the acoustic guitar, in its most gracefully jazz- (and ecological-effects)-tinged. The Bonfá release has the largest number of backup artists ~ John Storm Roberts, Original Music
The durable Brazilian musician Luiz Bonfá recorded this album for the Caju Music label in 1991 in Brazil, where it was much honored, but Americans weren't made aware of its riches until 1993. Throughout, Bonfá's acoustic guitar is treated to differing tone shadings and backgrounds -- sometimes left all alone, sometimes fronting a samba band. Tracks like "Space Adventure," "Menina Flor," and "Fat Tuesday's Theme" employ unnervingly realistic orchestrations by Jota Moraes on ...
| | Texas Paris So, You Think It's Hot Here? CD (1999)
Your Best Sucks songs
$8.99 "Cadillac of High Hair," the first song on So, You Think It's Hot Here?, starts so abruptly that it seems the engineer was a bit tardy hitting the "record" button on the 24-track machine. Then again, maybe it was Paris Texas' way of infusing a little punk-inspired slop into the proceedings. Regardless, the Wisconsin quintet's first album is an intriguingly ...
| | Skank MTV Ao Vivo CD (2002)
Your Best Sucks album
$9.19
| | Vordul Mega Revolution Of Yung Havocs CD (2004)
Your Best Sucks CD music
$10.95
| | Perfect Once, Twice, Three Times A Maybe CD (2004)
Your Best Sucks music CDs
$12.39
| | Bunk Johnson Complete Decca Session CD (2006)
Your Best Sucks songs
$12.19
| | Coral Roots & Echoes CD (2007) (Import) United Kingdom
Your Best Sucks album
$13.59 It's hard to remember now in retrospect, but in the summer of 2002, the Coral were going to be the saviors of the British indie music scene: their debut album was hyped to the skies, and their terrific lead single "Dreaming of You" was rightly praised as probably the best single to come out of Liverpool since "There She Goes" by the La's. But with the ascension of Franz Ferdinand, Arctic Monkeys, and the whole neo-Brit-pop scene, the Coral's amalgam of '60s freakbeat and '80s post-punk didn't fit in the zeitgeist of the time, and so even though their albums have remained consistently fine, they've generally been ignored by most folks outside of a devoted cult. Roots & Echoes, though it's easily the Coral's best album since 2003's Magic and Medicine, isn't going to change that. As the exceedingly old-fashioned cover art suggests, Roots & Echoes takes as its starting point the era immediately preceding the psychedelic explosion, circa 1966, when folk-rock and sunshine pop were melding into a new sound, AM radio-friendly but moving outside of the strict confines of the format. Echoes of cult faves like the Beau Brummels, the Cyrkle, and the first side of Love's Da Capo flitter through these songs, which are filled with ringing guitars and colored with strings, flutes, bongos, and other ear-candy touches. James Skelly's sweet-toned vocals are a perfect accompaniment to the melodic sweep of the songs, but if there's a fault to be found, it's that there's no single song here as immediately arresting as prior Coral gems like "Dreaming of You" or "In the Morning." The semi-orchestral closer "Music at Night" comes very close, however, sounding like a great lost Lee Hazlewood production for some un-remembered Reprise Records act. The Coral may not be the Next Big Thing anymore, but they're still making better records than many of the bands that have taken over that title in the intervening five years. ~ Stewart Mason
2007 album the eccentric Britpoppers. The album ...
| | Eric Burdon Mirage CD (2008)
Your Best Sucks CD music
$19.79 In 1973, Eric Burdon was asked to write the soundtrack for a film entitled MIRAGE. Entering the Record Plant studio in San Francisco with his group, The Eric Burdon Band, the singer-songwriter set to work recording. The soundtrack was already complete when United Artists decided to pull the plug on the movie project. The proposed double LP soundtrack similarly ended up gathering dust on the shelf, until this 2009 release. Although purportedly themed around the then still on-going Vietnam War, only the opening track "Dragon Lady" even obliquely refers to the conflict, while the other great societal divisions of the day are, if anything, even more veiled. Relieved of the burden of writing an actual album, Burdon used the soundtrack to explore a vast variety of styles, most notably on the title track, in which the singer incorporated lyrics written by friend Jimi Hendrix the night he died. The music pays fine tribute to him, while the psyched-out "Stole My Heart Away (First Sight)" also bears Hendrix's influence. The hard rocking "River of Blood", arguably the most creative track on the set, has hints of War, while also being inspired by ...
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