| | Hawkwind Take Me To Your Future CD - Import Hawkwind Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $15.69 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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Following on the heels of their critically acclaimed album Take Me To Your Leader, Hawkwind releases this dualdisc mini-album. In keeping with the band's futuristic outlook and also the title of the album, the band has released in this new format which includes visual elements as well as traditional audio elements. Side 1 features the album with 1 reworked track and 1 track from a forthcoming CD featuring Dave Brock & Bob Calvert. Also included is a remix of a track featuring Lemmy.
Composer: Hawkwind.
Hawkwind: Lemmy, Robert Calvert, Arthur Brown (vocals); Dave Brock (guitar); Simon House (violin); Jason Stuart (keyboards); Alan Davey (bass guitar); Richard Chadwick (drums). Take Me To Your Future Music Hawkwind Take Me To Your Future Songs Take Me To Your Future Music Review Purchase Take Me To Your Future CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Faces Long Player CD (1971)
Take Me To Your Future album
$6.25 On their second album Long Player, the Faces truly gel -- which isn't quite the same thing as having the band straighten up and fly right because in many ways this is album is even more ragged than their debut, with tracks that sound like they were recorded through a shoebox thrown up against a couple of haphazardly placed live cuts. But if the album seems pieced together from a few different sources, the band itself all seems to be coming from the ...
| | Faces Nod Is As Good As A Wink... To A Blind Horse CD (1971)
Take Me To Your Future CD music
$6.15
| | Faces Ooh La La CD (1973)
Take Me To Your Future music CDs
$6.09
| | Van Der Graaf Generator Godbluff CD (1975) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan; Remastered; Mini LP Sleeve
Take Me To Your Future songs
$25.69
| | Van Der Graaf Generator Still Life CD (1976) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan; Remastered; Mini LP Sleeve
Take Me To Your Future album
$30.75
| | Van Der Graaf Generator H To He Who Am The Only One CD (1970) (Import) Bonus Tracks; Japan
Take Me To Your Future CD music
$25.69
| | Jeanne Newhall Bedouin's Paradise CD (1998)
Take Me To Your Future music CDs
$12.65
| | Jeannie C Riley Best Of The Best CD (2000)
Take Me To Your Future songs
$7.99
| | Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds CD (1970) Japan
Take Me To Your Future album
$29.09 This eponymous album from '70s soft-rock group Joe Frank Hamilton & Reynolds has been released for the first time on CD.
The 11 songs on this Japanese edition include "Goin' Down" and "Don't Pull Your Love Out."
Dan Hamilton, Joe Frank Carollo, and Tommy Reynolds went Top Five in 1971 under the ...
| | D Boon D. Boon And Friends CD (2006)
Take Me To Your Future CD music
$11.59
| | Boo Radleys Giant Steps CD (1993) (Import) Sweden
Take Me To Your Future music CDs
$13.15 The Boo Radleys were never comfortable fitting into any of the easily ...
| | Rise Against Siren Song Of The Counter Culture CD (2004) Bonus Track
Take Me To Your Future songs
$11.65 For its third full-length, Rise Against side steps the pop-punk breakup music saturating the scene in 2004. Instead, the Chicago quartet channels classic punk-rock unrest, brandishing socially conscious lyrics in front of a backdrop of eager melody and tireless hardcore energy. SIREN SONG OF THE COUNTER CULTURE stretches itself stylistically, from the thrashy "State of the Union" to the compellingly melodic "Tip the Scales" to the acoustic ballad "Swing Life Away." Feverishly poppy and catchy, "Rumors of My Demise Have Been Greatly Exaggerated" captures Rise Against at their best, waving the punk-rock banner proudly for a new generation of fans.
Rise Against's somewhat sudden major label-ness has slightly diluted their direct assault on melodic hardcore, but the adjustment should only invite more sugar punkers to the Chicago combo's bittersweet party. Rise Against has moved up in the sonic nicety department -- loud rock vet GGGarth produces, and the Andy Wallace mix is a flawless cross section of thick, grit, and slick. But Siren Song of the Counter Culture is simply the band's latest statement, combining their significant yet not unwelcome Bad Religion influence with nods to the rousing choruses of peers like AFI. Beyond that grandiose title -- that line could've been lifted from a Crass treatise, for Pete's sake -- Rise Against seem to have diversified their lyrical base. There are still salvos of sharply defined social criticism -- "If we're the ...
| | Kyoto Jazz Massive 10 Year Anniversary CDs (2006) Remixes
Take Me To Your Future album
$18.05 In honor of their ten years of making and mixing hundreds of nu-jazz tracks, Kyoto Jazz Massive's label, Compost Records, put out a two-disc album of some of the highlights of the group's decade in the business. And of course, being that this is electronica music and that brothers Shuya and Yoshihiro Okino are producers, this is no set of originals culled from master copies and presented intact and unchanged. In true nu-jazz fashion, 10th Anniversary is a collection of remixes, covers, and tributes from and for some of the biggest names in the nu-jazz and house scene. Disc one, which contains a remix of "The Brightness of These Days" (originally on Spirit of the Sun) by British superstar Quantic as well as Kenny Dope's take on the classic "Shine" (which is also given a reworking by Jazztronik on disc two), would fit well with any house or club set, while the second disc, featuring work from the always excellent Da Lata (their cover of the Joao Bosco/Aldir Blanc song "Ronco da Cuica" is great and really organic sounding, despite all of the electronic instrumentation and production), Kenny Dope's Masters at Work partner Little Louie Vega (who does a cover of "Aphrodite"), and Toshio Matsuura (who makes "Behind the Shadow" very haunting and melancholic with subtle and affecting vocals and a soft theremin), focuses more on the nu-jazz side of Kyoto Jazz Massive's body of work, with lots of live instrumentation, swinging sax and piano solos, and beats that really move. It's a nice complement to the more processed Euro-lounge ideas explored on the first disc, and overall creates a really cohesive and interesting look into the career of one of the genre's biggest and longest-lasting names. ~ Marisa Brown
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