| | RBD Celestial CD RBD Discography of CDs
(16 Customer Reviews)
On its third studio outing, the highly successful Mexican pop act RBD presents another set of immediately accessible Spanish-language tunes. Consisting of three boys (Alfonso,Christian, and Christopher) and three girls (Anahi, Dulce, and Maite), the fresh-faced teen vocal ensemble mixes catchy beat-driven dance numbers ("Tal Vez Despues," "Dame") with gentle ballads ("Algun Dia," "Es Por Amor"), resulting in a record with remarkably wide appeal. Celestial Music Review Average Rating: (4.7 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews RBD Rocks you guys RBD has the best music in the world yo may have to buy their CD becuase their music is fierce Submitted by nomada_luis90 (bY JOSE IN Anchorage, AK, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
RBD rulez like no 2morrow #1 i luv this band ever since they started the sopa opera in 2004 Rbelde i have the season and i have all their cds like rock they r the best i reccomend u hear or buy their cd!
:) XD :) Submitted by Stepahnie, puddlez420 (Toronto, Ont, Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
rbd is the best and I love them i have every single rbd cd and the are the best you need to listen to their music Submitted by daniela (bryan,tx,usa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
rbd is the best and I love them i have every single rbd cd and the are the best you need to listen to their music Submitted by daniela (bryan,tx,usa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
rbd is the best and I love them i haveeverysinglerbd cd and the arethe best you need to listen to their music Submitted by daniela (bryan,tx,usa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Celestial CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
Celestial album
$6.39 This audio document of The Corrs' Dublin homecoming concert has pretty much everything fans of Irish pop could wish for, including an appearance from Bono in his earthly incarnation, fresh from an audience with President George W. Bush. It's to the band's credit that the charismatic singer fails to steal the show, despite creditable efforts via an anthemized version of Ryan Adams' beautifully downtempo "When the Stars Go Blue," and a great, leering rendition of Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra's "Summer Wine."
Somewhat more mysteriously, Rolling Stone Ron Wood also turns up on what sounds dangerously close to a lounge version of Jimi Hendrix's "Little Wing," but this minor faux pas is redeemed by the Irish folk medley "Joy of Life/Trout ...
| | RBD Rebelde CD (2005)
Celestial CD music
$9.75 RBD lays down a radio-ready version of Latin pop that has its roots in contemporary, mainstream American rock and in classic pop on the order of ABBA. The group, which consists of three women and three men, has telegenic good looks, immediately accessible melodies, and--most importantly--a practice of rotating vocal duties that represents each singer's lead abilities and the group's impressive knack for choral singing. REBELDE kicks off with the mid-tempo, soft-to-heavy rock of the title track, and goes on to mix things up with sing-song dance-pop (as on the chorus of "Otro Dia Que Va"), New Wave-inflected rockers (""Futuro Ex-Novio"), and sweeping power ballads ("Salvame"). Highly polished and ripe for Top 40 success, RBD pushes all the right Latin-pop buttons on REBELDE.
The Brazilian version of Rebelde features the same songs as its Spanish-language counterpart, except they're all sung in Portuguese by RBD. The sequencing has been changed slightly, with the three big hits moved to the ...
| | Dredg Catch Without Arms CD (2005)
Celestial music CDs
$8.49 Early on, critics often described Dredg as a metal group. However, the quartet has since matured into a hard-edged indie-rock ensemble that seeks diversity and refinement in its music. On CATCH WITHOUT ARMS, the band favors highly orchestrated parts, dense guitar riffs, and powerful drumming. Each song is based around memorable vocal hooks and sensitive lyrical content.
Many tracks on CATCH WITHOUT ARMS have a searching quality to them. Despite the sheer force of the music, ...
| | RBD En Vivo CD (2005) Enhanced CD
Celestial songs
$10.39 To commemorate their first-ever live tour, RBD released a CD/DVD, Tour Generación RBD en Vivo. The featured performance includes all the key songs from Rebelde, the group's debut album: "Rebelde," ...
| | RBD Nuestro Amor CD (2005)
Celestial album
$9.75
| | RBD - Tour Generacion En Vivo DVD (2005)
Celestial CD music
$12.79
| | Talk To Me Daddy CDs (2000) (Import) United Kingdom
Celestial music CDs
$18.69
| | Lou Reed Retro CD (1989) (Import) Australia
Celestial songs
$23.65 There have been ...
| | Techo Dome 7 CD (2004)
Celestial album
$14.35
| | Fausto Amodei Se Non Li Conoscete CD (2004) (Import) Italy
Celestial CD music
$24.95
| | Modern Jazz Quartet European Concert CD (1960) Japan; Limited Edition; Mini LP Sleeve
Celestial music CDs
$47.75 Recorded live in Scandinavia in April 1960. Originally released on Atlantic (2-603). Includes liner notes by Joel Dorn and Jule Foster.
Digitally remastered by Gene Paul (DB Plus Digital Services, New York, New York).
Long considered one of, if not the classic album from the Modern Jazz Quartet, European Concert defines them simultaneously as a recording entity as well as a working band. MJQ presented jazz in the context of a formally structured environment, much like a chamber group in the classical context. Within the band, the groove of Milt "Bags" Jackson's vibes met the solid swing of Connie Kay's drums, the funky strut of Percy Heath's bass, and the elegant classicism of John Lewis's piano. The MJQ were able, in a context that pushed at jazz's boundaries from the outside, to create a music that swung without edges or fragmented harmonic structures. Instead -- as this album perhaps more than any of their studio recordings exemplifies -- they used concepts of time, space, meter, rhythm, and changes to weave together a seamless whole, where melody grounded the improvisation but never really restricted it. The kind of graceful counterpoint that exists between Lewis and Jackson here is instinctual at this time in 1960. The show included the finest moments of their early recording career in a live setting. One listen to "Django" will make your head swim, with its sparse rhythmic texture that is still driving and Lewis' rag melody line when it encounters the pure stretch of the polytonal rhythms Jackson is laying down. If it weren't for Heath the entire thing would become unglued, because he was the hinge on this set. Elsewhere on "I Should Care," Lewis brings his solo down to a rudimentary three-finger patter-without chords that takes the line apart harmonically while never straying from anything in the architecture of the tune. Much later, on the encore "Round Midnight," MJQ take Monk's masterwork and turns it into a near rondo as time changes are constant in the first 16 bars. The front line melody blurs between Jackson and Lewis, as do harmonic counterpoint changes. While it's ...
| | Feriz Blue Showdown CD (2008)
Celestial songs
$12.69
| | Kindness Swinging Party CD (2009) (Import)
Celestial album
$7.94 
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