| | Shuttah Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 CD Shuttah Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 Music Shuttah Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 Songs | | Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 CD DISC 1: |
| 1. | Image Maker |
| 2. | Bull Run |
| 3. | Cry My Little Darling |
| 4. | Lady Smith |
| 5. | Village Green |
| 6. | Crimp, The |
| 7. | Christmas 1914 |
| 8. | Fens, The |
| | Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 Songs DISC 2: |
| 1. | Guernica |
| 2. | World War II |
| 3. | Concrete |
| 4. | Imjin |
| 5. | She's a Bad Girl |
| 6. | Wizard, The |
| 7. | Tell Me Why |
| 8. | Conclusion |
| Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 Music Review Purchase Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | | Also Bought |
| Paper Garden CD (1968)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 album
$10.99 A decent if somewhat candy-coated effort in the pop-psychedelic vein, combining cheerful sunshine pop sensibilities with some hard-edged psychedelic playing. It all falls somewhere between the Beatles' Revolver album and the Zombies' Odessey & Oracle (the latter especially on "Man Do You" and "Raven"), with some Sgt. Pepper-type layered choruses and overdubbed strings and other instruments. The question is how well it represents the sound of the Paper Garden -- and that begs the larger question behind the purpose of recording an LP; The Paper Garden dates from a period when the answer to that question was starting to change. According to the account of singer/guitarist Joe Arduino, the New York City-based quintet had a solid stage repertory established from performances at colleges in the Northeastern United States in 1967 and 1968, when they got the chance to ...
| | Sweetwater Melon CD (1971) Remastered; Reissued
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 CD music
$10.45 That old cliché "you can't tell a book by its cover" may have been true for the Guess Who's Road Food LP, a repulsive album jacket and inner sleeve housing a gem like "Star Baby," but the lesser-known Sweetwater beat the Guess Who to the punch by three years with a watermelon on the front of the Melon LP, and its remains on the back. The music inside is unsettling, but not without merit; Fred Herrera's "Rejoice...The Smile of Man" plays like a less annoying "White Bird" two years after It's a Beautiful Day unleashed that FM staple. Herrera goes off key, but that adds to the charm. Nansi Nevins does not come up with a "White Rabbit" with "Don't Forget," but still manages to sound like Grace Slick on her songwriting contribution. It's the Jefferson Airplane's "Lather" by way of H.P Lovecraft. "Take It From the Splice, Boys" is Jethro Tull meets Santana while predicting the dawn of the Electric Light Orchestra, that mix not flowing well into the countryish "Naturally," which could be Nick Gravenites' version of Big Brother & the Holding Company. Flute, cello, conga, and acoustic guitar should all combine to make for a delicious musical feast, but there are only glimpses of possibilities on Melon, an album that is disjointed, and in desperate need of a song that can raise ...
| | Sweetwater Just For You CD (1970)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 music CDs
$10.29 The recording of Sweetwater's second album was hindered by Nanci Nevins' injuries in a serious car accident, which for a time rendered her incapable of performing with the band, although she does sing on much of Just for You. A more serious problem was an overall lack of strength or focus to the material, which covers a lot of bases of 1969-1970 album oriented rock without staking a ...
| | Beauregard Ajax Deaf Priscilla CD (2006)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 songs
$13.35 Southern California's Beauregard Ajax recorded Deaf Priscilla in late 1967 and early 1968, with legendary Del-Fi Records founder, Bob Keane producing, but the record was shelved when ...
| | Blind Ravage CD (2007)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 album
$11.59
| | Contents Are Through You CD (2008)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 CD music
$15.39 Based in Davenport, IA, the Contents Are were a rock band whose music typified the grey zone between the era of garage rock and the dawn of psychedelia; what they were doing was less aggressive and more melodically adventurous than what the average band of high school kids was bashing out back in the day, with some tricky guitar interplay ...
| | Troggs Hit Single Anthology CD (2004) (Import) Germany
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 music CDs
$9.39
| | Michael Farquharson Arrival CD (1997) (Import) Canada
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 songs
$15.75
| | Johnny Hodges, Vol. 2: 1939-1940 CD (2004)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 album
$18.05 Award Winner
| | Redheart Sacred Season CD (2002)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 CD music
$13.39
| | Meerkats Enemy Planet CD (1997)
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 music CDs
$11.39 CD Review of Meerkats Enemy Planet Appeared in icon May 15, 1997Enemy Planet Retro Rocket RecordsA regional stage fave since forming in 1993, Cedar Rapids' Meerkats bring an expanded musical palette and a quantum leap in production values to their third release, Enemy Planet. Still building on the experimental pop motifs established on Magical Misery Tour and Curse of the Hearse, the feisty quartet has incorporated spacey, mood-shaping touches of sci-fi/surf instrumental maneuvers to the mix, and evidence of their growth as musicians, singers and song-writers turns up all over the place. Despite the futuristic outer space look and feel of the cover and title, Enemy Planet is none other than the one we all share. As flat out rockers who have done more than their fair share of time in the redneck bars that dot these here hinterlands, Meerkats know all too well the palpable alienation created playing original material for the innovation-challenged denizens who would much prefer Foreigner covers or -better yet- Alan Jackson, Reba and Wynonna on the juke-box. Uncomfortable as such gigs tend to be, they do create and atmosphere that both makes a band more tightly interdependent on each other and generate a unique battle scarred sense of humor-and Meerkats display both of these tendencies in spades. A remarkably strong indie release, Enemy Planet's 14 tracks draw from the various incarnations of punk and garage rock with echo-laden single -note guitar-lines making deft references to nebulous TV detective and beach movie themes: all held together by a strong melodic sense and clever lyrical constructs. There isn't a weak track in the lot, but early faves include "Shape of Your Skull" (a dopey, driving crusher), The Merseybeat-tinged "Psychograph", the amp-shredding "Tornados of Blackhawk County (with a metallic guitar coda that I swear is lifted from Gary Lewis' "this Diamond Ring") and the creepy "Too Precious for Words" (which recalls Pink Flag-era Wire). There's a lot going on here, and a lot left to unveil itself. A terrific record by a band with a remarkably sure sense of itself that seems destined to one day bring this planet around to their side. Jim MusserMeerkats are a three man rock ...
| | Roman Revutsky Incomplete CD (2007) Import; Extended Play
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 songs
$9.35
| | Harold & Kumar Escape From Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay CD (2008) Original Soundtrack
Image Maker Vol. 1 & 2 album
$14.09
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