| | Army Of Anyone CD Army Of Anyone Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Formed by Filter singer Richard Patrick and the Stone Temple Pilots' Dean and Robert DeLeo, on its self-titled debut album Army Of Anyone plays panoramic hard rock much in the vein of both of its participants' former outfits. "Disappear " appealingly blends prog and pop, managing to sound a little like a Sting song in the process, while "Goodbye" aerates its slamming rock & roll with a pleading, ethereal chorus.
Audio Mixer: Ken Andrews.
Army of Anyone: Robert DeLeo (bass guitar); Dean DeLeo, Richard Patrick, Ray Luzier.
Personnel: Richard Patrick (vocals); Dean DeLeo (guitar); Ray Luzier (drums); Robert DeLeo (background vocals).
Entertainment Weekly (p.95) - "[T]he group's eponymous first record has a riff-heavy sound much like STP's." -- Grade: B+ Army Of Anyone Songs | 1. | It Doesn't Seem to Matter |
| 2. | Goodbye |
| 3. | Generation |
| 4. | Better Place, A |
| 5. | Non Stop |
| 6. | Disappear |
| 7. | Stop, Look and Listen |
| 8. | Ain't Enough |
| 9. | Father Figure |
| 10. | Leave It |
| 11. | This Wasn't Supposed to Happen |
| Army Of Anyone Music Review Average Rating: (3.5 out of 5 stars)   Flat-out deadpan delivery Tracks 8 thru 10 are the heaviest they've ever been. The rest is tailored for radio rock. Sounds like the old nineties rule again. What the heck ... ?!!! I want Filter that's Filter and STP? Don't look who's lonely now anyways! Pffth to you, too! Submitted by Hmmm ... (Edmonton, Alberta, CANADA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Good debut Army of Anyone, the amalgamut ;) of Stone Temple Pilots and Filter, has put together a solid collection of modern rock tracks. Nothing fancy or groundbreaking here. But what you do get is solid harmonies, impassioned vocals and lyrics, and solid production. Tracks that deserve your attention: It Doesn't Seem to Matter (great bass), Goodbye (great vocals), and Disappear (great everything). Submitted by AmeerSoh (New Brunswick, NJ) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Army Of Anyone CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Michael Jackson Thriller CD (1982) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Special Edition
Army Of Anyone album
$8.99 The finest example of perfect disco pop, and a record that should be prescribed to musical snobs and manic depressives. The album is a true ambassador of what pop music can be. Jackson whoops and dances through a suite of unforgettable melodies that should be danced to with a smile on your face. Each track offers at least one musical hook, ...
| | Slayer World Painted Blood CD (2009)
Army Of Anyone CD music
$10.39 Of the "big four" original thrash bands (the other three being Metallica, Anthrax, and Megadeth), Slayer was the least compromising and most consistent. As such, 2009's WORLD PAINTED BLOOD recalled more than the title of Slayer's 1986 masterpiece REIGN IN ...
| | Katatonia Night Is The New Day CD (2009)
Army Of Anyone music CDs
$14.04 The latest album from Swedish doom rockers Katatonia, their first studio effort since 2006, is as moody and beautiful as their other latter-day work. The group's career can be marked in two stages based on the condition of singer Jonas Renske's vocal cords -- basically, after the band's first two albums, he developed health problems that prevented him from performing harsh death growls, and ever since the band has moved in an increasingly melodic direction, even covering songs by Will Oldham and Jeff Buckley. It's unsurprising to learn that Opeth's Mikael Åkerfeldt ...
| | Chickenfoot CD (2009) Digipak
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$12.79 In true old-school "supergroup" fashion, Chickenfoot is a hard-rock dream ...
| | Queen Greatest Hits I, II & III: The Platinum Collection CDs (2001) Box Set
Army Of Anyone album
$15.39 Recorded between 1974 & 1997. Includes liner notes by Jim Jenkins, Jacky Smith, Andy Davis, Phil Symes.
With Queen officially enshrined in the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame, Hollywood Records reintroduces the band yet again with the release of GREATEST HITS I, II & III. While Volumes I and II are full of Queen classics you already know by heart, the third cobbles together odds and sods from the far corners of Queen's canon along with solo cuts from Freddie Mercury and Brian May.
Opening with the operatic rock classic "Bohemian Rhapsody," it's easy to hear not only how this British quartet achieved the kind of global acclaim that ensured they'd be enshrined alongside the likes of the Beatles and Led Zeppelin. When they weren't ...
| | Very Best Of Enya CD (2009)
Army Of Anyone CD music
$14.24 Comprised of 18 tracks culled from the singer/composer's first three decades, The Very Best of Enya was pieced together by the artist herself, along with longtime collaborators Nicky and ...
| | Yusef Lateef Other Sounds CD (1957)
Army Of Anyone music CDs
$9.89 Other Sounds was the first album on which Yusef Lateef looked beyond the confines of jazz and popular music to hear and perhaps "sing" the music he heard from the East. He hadn't yet embraced it, but it intrigued him enough to employ the use of an argol on this recording. Lateef's band on this date featured flügelhorn giant Wilbur Harden, pianist Hugh Lawson (who also played Turkish finger cymbals), bassist Ernie Farrow (who doubled on rebob), and drummer Oliver Jackson, who used an "earth-board" as well as his kit. The set begins innocently enough with a post-bop, semi-West Coast swing version of Irving Berlin's "All Alone" that's all Lateef. ...
| | Paul Robeson Freedom Train And The Welsh Transatlantic Concert CD (1998)
Army Of Anyone songs
$11.49 Liner Note Author: Ian Shaw.
| | Celtic Soundscape CD (1999)
Army Of Anyone album
$2.75
| | Traveling Through The Jungle: Fife And Drum Band Music From The Deep South CD (1995)
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$10.49
| | Dizzy Gillespie Verve Jazz Masters 10 CD (1994)
Army Of Anyone music CDs
$12.35 Recorded between 1950 and 1963. Includes liner notes by Carl Woideck.
Dizzy Gillespie's many collaborations with producer Norman Granz resulted in an impressive body of work that forms the basis for Verve Jazz Masters 10, a grab bag of bop, big band, and mainstream modern jazz recordings made between the years 1950 and 1963. The impressively packed roster of participants includes Roy Eldridge, Charlie Parker, and Sonny Stitt. In a sensible and very effective maneuver, the collection opens with the famous "Manteca" performed by Gillespie's big band at the Newport Jazz Festival. This single seven-minute performance will tell you everything you need to know about Dizzy Gillespie. Every aspect of his musical persona appeared to the people during that exciting ...
| | Robert Ward New Role Soul CD (2000)
Army Of Anyone songs
$12.29 Less of a horn-drenched affair than his Black Top albums, New Role Soul presents Robert Ward in a smaller, looser setting that definitely works to his advantage. Instead of taking the usual let's-cut-come-oldies approach, the producers let Ward create on the fly, and the results easily rank up there with his 1990 comeback album Fear No Evil. For most of New Role Soul Ward is backed by just a three-piece rhythm section of bass, drums, and organ, leaving plenty of room for his testifying vocals and Magnatone-enhanced guitar. The two instrumentals here, "The Chicken Jerk" and "Chitlins Con Carne," are classy arrangements full of funky, fingerpicked guitar solos -- like Albert Collins, Ward knew how to milk a guitar-organ combo to the last drop. Even more impressive is Ward's rhythm guitar playing, a virtual bottomless pit of cool grooves and subtle fills. (Power chords will never be the same after "Peace of Mind.") In the decade since Fear No Evil, Ward's vocals have lost some power, but that doesn't stop him from diving into tortured-soul territory, as he does on "Whatever I Receive" and "I'm So Proud to Have You for My Love." This is probably the most well-rounded album Ward has recorded. ~ Ken Chang
veteran blues singer/guitarist has the vocal urgency & immediacy of singers like Otis Redding & Wilson Pickett; Ward pioneered the use of the Magnatone amplifier which was featured on many of his 1960s recordings as Robert ...
| | Pulp This Is Hardcore CD (1998)
Army Of Anyone album
$12.59 "I'm not Jesus, though I've got the same initials," croons Jarvis Cocker in Pulp's folllowup to 1996's gleefully hateful DIFFERENT CLASS. As this line illustrates, THIS IS HARDCORE takes Pulp further over the top in every sense--shamelessly ...
| | Tetsuya Kuwayama Fiesta CD (2002)
Army Of Anyone CD music
$41.89
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