| | Japanimation Little Mermaid Soundtrack CD - Import
Little Mermaid Soundtrack Music | List Price | $54.99 (You save $3.74) | | Category | Soundtrack Albums | | Label | Phantom | | CD Universe Part number | 7293868 | | Catalog number | 28789 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Oct 09, 2006 |
Little Mermaid Soundtrack Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Japanimation Little Mermaid Soundtrack CD - Import. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Little Mermaid Soundtrack CD Purchase Music From Little Mermaid CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | This Christmas CD (2007)
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$9.79
| | Phineas & Ferb Phineas and Ferb: Songs From the Hit Disney Tv Series CD (2009) Digipak
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$10.09
| | Dianne Reeves Good Night, & Good Luck CD (2005)
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$12.55
| | Dream A Little Dream CD (1990) Original Soundtrack
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$7.39
| | John Lennon Imagine CD (1988) Original Soundtrack; SDTK
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$12.95 The John Lennon legacy ...
| | Pulp Fiction CD (1994) Original Soundtrack
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$11.59
| | Djin Son In The Sun CD (2005)
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$20.25
| | Irma La Douce CD (2008) Bonus Tracks
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$13.25
| | Ben Bullington White Sulphur Springs CD (2008)
Little Mermaid Soundtrack
$15.89 Ben Bullington Bio“Ben Bullington's work draws life-breath from the earth, rivers, sky and people of Montana,” says Rodney Crowell, the Nashville songwriting legend who plays guitar and performs a duet on Bullington’s latest CD, White Sulphur Springs. “In the same way Guy Clark's jeweler's vision captures the eloquent essence of Texas culture without being regional, Ben frames the stillness of Montana winters, the strength of her women and the spiritual bankruptcy of no-account politicians with disarming ease.” “Plus,” Crowell adds, “the guy's a pretty damn good doctor for a songwriter.” In the tradition of poet-troubadours like Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, Ben Bullington tells stories that explore what it means to be a citizen in these perilous times. His latest collection of songs are urgent dispatches from the front lines of America’s war with its own heart and soul. He finds his material in truck-stop diners, VFW dance halls, jittery waiting rooms, and the sun-warmed stones of a castle observed from his window in White Sulphur Springs, Montana. That small town, where Bullington lived until recently and helped raise his three sons while working as a country doctor, inspired the title song of the CD. Accompanied by his own acoustic guitar and backed by a sure-footed Nashville session band, Bullington sings,“Dreams don’t come easy on seven bucks an hour,Maybe it’s a matter of what kind of dreams you have.There’s trout streams, and the air is clean,and money don’t mean everything, in a place called White Sulphur Springs.” His layered, subtle lyrics and deceptively simple melodies have attracted the attention – and praise – of some famous musicians including Crowell and singer Tracy Nelson, who also appears on the album. Like the character in his searching song “Ain’t Found It Yet” Ben Bullington has been all over this country - and a few others - waiting tables and working on oil exploration crews and in remote clinics and hospitals. He grew up in Roanoke, Virginia, the middle of five children born to a stockbroker/ex-Navy man and a homemaker. His brother, Andy, became a professional musician and has worked as a solid Austin sideman for close to 20 years, but Ben Bullington took a different road to his life as a songwriter. He went to Vanderbilt University (“cause it was in Nashville”), absorbing the music scene of some of his heroes like Guy Clark ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|