| | R E M And I Feel Fine: The Best Of CD R E M Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
A compilation ideal for those who have worn out their copies of EPONYMOUS, 2006's AND I FEEL FINE surveys R.E.M.'s lauded 1980s output for the I.R.S. label, going into far greater depth than the former disc. In fact, this 2006 collection presents album versions of almost every song on EPONYMOUS, and bolsters the track listing to 21 classic tunes, from the spare, chiming "Radio Free Europe" to the rustic, melancholy "Cuyahoga" to the surging college-rock anthem "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)." Charting a non-chronological course through the band's early years--when Michael Stipe and company gradually began branching out from their earnest post-punk sound--the set serves to highlight the cohesiveness of R.E.M.'s vision, an aesthetic that made the group one of the most respected and beloved rock acts of the '80s and '90s.
Additional Tracks; Deluxe Edition
Note: The collectors' edition presents a bonus disc of rarities, including previously unreleased and live tracks.
R.E.M.: Michael Stipe, Mike Mills, Peter Buck, Bill Berry.
Spin (p.104) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[The collection] has all the great early singles and album tracks that highlight their moody allure." Uncut (p.123) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[T]hese early songs retain their strangeness....One of those rare groups that seems to be the product of four distinct intelligences..." And I Feel Fine: The Best Of Music And I Feel Fine: The Best Of Music And I Feel Fine: The Best Of Music Review Buy And I Feel Fine: The Best Of CD Purchase And I Feel Fine: The Best Of CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Electric Light Orchestra A New World Record - Expanded Edition CD (1976) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$7.59 Also available in a 3-pack with FACE THE MUSIC and DISCOVERY.
1976's A NEW WORLD RECORD is both a classic of commercial '70s pop and an archetypal ELO album. From the outer-space synths and rich orchestrations that open the album to Jeff Lynne's meticulous production and Beatlesque melodies, A NEW WORLD RECORD is magnificent ear candy. Both ambitious enough to appeal to "serious" rock fans and ultra-catchy enough to sound terrific on Top 40 radio (the plaintively gorgeous, McCartney-like "Telephone Line" and the anthemic "Livin' Thing" were well-deserved smashes), ELO was one of the few '70s bands whose appeal covered both the ...
| | Electric Light Orchestra Face The Music CD (1975) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Expanded Edition
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$7.59 Also available in a 3-pack with A NEW WORLD RECORD and DISCOVERY.
Master ...
| | Electric Light Orchestra On The Third Day CD (1973) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Expanded Edition
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$7.59
| | Pretenders CDs (1980) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$21.29 Former rock critic Chrissie Hynde launched the Pretenders with an engaging, yet passive, version of the Kinks' "Stop Your Sobbing." She unveiled her own persona fully on The Pretenders, which contains a series of excellent compositions marked by her sensual vocals and brilliant sense of dynamics. An understanding of pop's structures allowed Hynde to exploit them to her own ends while sympathetic support, particularly that of guitarist James Honeyman-Scott, used the excitement of rock without reference to its cliches. ...
| | Pretenders II CDs (1981) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$17.75 The band look magnificent on the cover as they pose with make-up or heavily retouched faces. They look confident, knowing that their follow-up is almost as good as the debut. Chrissie and Ray Davies were stepping out at this time, hence the opening track, "The Adultress," as Hynde whispers her confession over a furious wall of sound, to be immediately followed by her reminder that "Bad Boys Get Spanked." If only Chrissie, if only. The album drives and dives, pausing for "I Go To Sleep," another old Ray Davies song. There is not a bad track in sight.
The Pretenders' second album received a much-deserved upgrade in the fall of 2006, as Rhino reissued it as a double-disc set containing a ...
| | Doors Soft Parade CD (1969) Gold; Remastered
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$20.29
| | Wailin' Wildcat CD (2000)
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$18.09
| | Anders P Bongo Nassa CD (1999) (Import)
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$18.15
| | Pyromanix Searching For Rock El Roll CD (2003) Import
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$15.25
| | Nice Nice Chrome CD (2003)
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$13.15
| | Brian Glaze Let's Go To The Sea CD (2006)
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$14.75
| | Michelle White Wandering Road CD (2006) (Import)
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$24.95
| | James Duncan Future Past CD (2006) (Import) England; United Kingdom
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$12.99 Hopes were high for the debut solo album by Duncan James, former member of multi-platinum selling boy band Blue, especially after fellow bandmembers Simon Webbe and Lee Ryan's debut albums both hit the Top Ten, and James had one successful single already behind him, the song "I Believe My Heart" from the show The Woman in White. The omens were not looking good when the first single and opening track "Sooner or Later" just scraped into the Top 40 and the second single, the piano backed ballad "Can't Stop a River," failed to even achieve that, even backed by the writing talents of Seal. Future Past was not a bad album, but every single one of the 12 songs, even the cover of Lonestar's "Amazed" was a mid-tempo ballad, the sort that Blue specialized in, with only a break for the song "Letter to God" breaking the tempo with an out and out slow ballad. There ...
| | Bob Lanois Snake Road CD (2006) (Import)
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$26.29
| | Haunt Deep North CD (2008)
And I Feel Fine: The Best Of
$12.79
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