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Personnel: Daz Dillinger, Nino Brown, Ant Dogg, Bad Boy , Yogi .
DVD Features:
1. Interview with Khool Aid Of Pocos Pero Locos
2. "Serious" Video
3. Interview with Khool Aid & Nino Brown
4. "Bring It On" Video feat. Nino Brown
5. Interview with Khool Aid & Bad Boy
6. "Krazy Ass Mexikans" Video feat. Bad Boy
7. Interview with Khool Aid
8. "Who Wanna Roll" Video Streets Are Kalling Music Mr Shadow Streets Are Kalling Songs | 1. | Serious |
| 2. | Open the Gate |
| 3. | S.D.C.A. |
| 4. | Non Believers |
| 5. | Gangsta Gangstas |
| 6. | Krazy Ass Mexikans - (featuring Bad Boy) |
| 7. | Pocos Pero Locos Break |
| 8. | Bring It On - (featuring Nino Brown) |
| 9. | Sound of My Heata - (remix, featuring Daz Dillinger) |
| 10. | You Fools Ain't Ready |
| 11. | Feelin' Like You're Spinnin' |
| 12. | Game's Flooded, The |
| Streets Are Kalling Music Review
Purchase Streets Are Kalling CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Fantasia Back To Me CD (2010)
Streets Are Kalling album
$9.58 The title of Fantasia's third album Back to Me surely refers to the American Idol winner reconnecting with her roots -- a move that may be a little premature because she hasn't abandoned them during her four year hiatus from recording, she simply shifted her attention from the studio to the stage, taking the time to star in the musical adaptation of The Color Purple and even dabble in reality television. It was enough activity to keep her in the public eye, but not enough to elevate her profile toward superstardom, so perhaps she needed to treat Back to Me as a full-fledged comeback, if only to give her a boost toward the upper reaches of the charts. And even with a sleek throwback like "Collard Greens & Cornbread" and titles borrowed from the Jackson 5 ("Who's Lovin' You") and B.B. King ...
| | Only Doo-Wop Collection You'll Ever Need CDs (2005)
Streets Are Kalling CD music
$18.59
| | Gucci Mane So Far Gucci CD (2010)
Streets Are Kalling music CDs
$14.05
| | Best Of Gerald Levert CD (2010)
Streets Are Kalling songs
$11.44 The Best of Gerald ...
| | Michael Grimm Live CD (2007)
Streets Are Kalling album
$16.39 I met Michael Grimm on Friday afternoon September 3rd, 2004 at a place called Lucille's Smokehouse Bar-B-Que. We met to set up the equipment for his solo accoustic weekend performance. He was in jeans and a tee shirt, with a very gentle, humble, friendly manner expressing his happiness to sing and play his guitar. After setting up the equipment, I asked him to play a song or two so that I could set levels on the PA system. What I didni¢â‚¬â„¢t realize was that in the next few minutes, after years in the music business, I was going to hear, for the first time, one of the best, most soulful, passionate singer that I had ever heard in my career. As I set the controls, I marveled at how easy he made it seem. I knew that I was in the presence of a very gifted young man who has a wonderful career ahead of him. One of kind. What I didni¢â‚¬â„¢t know at the time, was that in 1999, Michael had won the CCMA Star of the Year Award for country music and had received his award at the Rymen Auditorium (the old home of the Grand Ole Opry) in Nashville, Tennessee. So not only could he sing the heck out of the blues and soul, he was also a great country singer. He could do it all! Michael played and sang his heart ...
| | Eli 'Paperboy' Reed Come And Get It! CD (2010)
Streets Are Kalling CD music
$10.38 Ever since the dawn of the electric guitar, white boys have sung the blues, some with considerably more success than others. Eli "Paperboy" Reed is part of that long tradition, but he stands apart from the pack as much as he belongs to it, due in large part to his age. Raised on CD reissues of classic blues and soul -- he was not even 10 when the first Complete Stax/Volt Singles box came out -- Reed has absorbed the sound and sensibility of classic `60s soul but sings without any white-boy blues affectations, totally comfortable in his own skin because nobody else his age, of any race, was attempting to make this kind of music. This can cause a kind of a disconnect -- Reed sounds so white when he sings, it's disarming -- but he pours on the passion and has fully absorbed the tight turns of Stax and loves the sound as much as the structure, so much so that Come and Get It! -- his third LP and first for a major label -- feels a bit like an unearthed relic, built on songs and sounds that could pass for unheard gems if it wasn't for Reed's unapologetically white voice, free of affectations and ticks. Some of that may be due to producer Mike Elizondo's work -- he manages to make this sound like a throwback without being stiff, and without ...
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