| | Maldita Vecindad Lo Esencial CD Maldita Vecindad Discography of CDs
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Audio Remasterer: Juan Cristobal Losada. Maldita Vecindad Lo Esencial Songs Purchase Lo Esencial CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Bob Dylan Christmas In The Heart CD (2009)
Lo Esencial album
$10.09
| | Trans-Siberian Orchestra Night Castle CDs (2009)
Lo Esencial CD music
$11.35
| | An An Evening With Il Divo: Live In Barcelona CDs (2009) With DVD
Lo Esencial music CDs
$15.17
| | Shakira She Wolf CD (2009)
Lo Esencial songs
$11.18 Last time around, Shakira touched upon so many styles she couldn't be contained on one album, splitting Oral Fixation in two. This time, she focuses on one sound only: a pulsating electro-disco that crosses all boundaries and welcomes all nationalities. Such concentration behooves Shakira, freeing her to release her inner She Wolf, a wild wacko who's as coo coo as she is carnal. And for as sexy as Shakira is -- crucially, her music is sexy too -- what really gives She Wolf its bite is her inspired nuttiness, ...
| | Belin All The Way In CDs (2009) With DVD
Lo Esencial album
$13.75 At times, it was hard to figure out whether Berlin were an average synth pop band trying to carve out their ...
| | Skillet Awake CD (2009)
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$11.69
| | Verve No Come Down CDs (1994)
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$8.59
| | Minibar Fly Below The Radar CDs (2003)
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$9.79 Minibar continue to stake out their niche of respectable, but not astounding, roots rock on their second release Fly Below the Radar. Much was made of the group's faux-Americana feel in its initial press coverage, but although this does have definite folk-rock, country, and West Coast harmony influences, it's not as simple as a British band trying to play American. They play tuneful rock that has pop appeal without selling out, Simon Petty's breathy, slightly scratchy vocals projecting an inviting, world-weary, reflective warmth. Echoes of bands like R.E.M. and, reaching further back, the Byrds and late-'60s/early-'70s Brit-pop can be heard in addition to the more contemporary alt-folk-rock factors. There are varied accents like the brooding Spanish melodics in "New Mexico," the fairground instruments on the fade of the lilting "Unstoppable," and the ethereal country tinge of "Breathe Easy" and "Martha." There's an even-keeled feel of containment to the proceedings, though, that makes this more modestly likable than striking. ~ Richie Unterberger
California's allure has always been hard to resist. Boasting a rich musical history, the state has always been known to adopt a healthy number of talented transplants like Gram Parsons and Neil Young, and embrace them as its own native sons. The success of these transplants over the years has only further augmented California's implicit promise of artistic prosperity and the actualization of one's artistic dreams. To Simon Petty, singer-songwriter ...
| | Ultimate Soul CD (2003)
Lo Esencial album
$16.39
| | Blood, Sweat, and Tears New Blood CD (1972)
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$10.49
| | Gold City Quartet Gold City Christmas CD (2005)
Lo Esencial music CDs
$10.95
| | Koko Taylor South Side Lady CD (1973) (Import)
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$28.89
| | Yuri Okhochinskiy All For You CD (2007) (Import) Import
$18.39 | | Al Mehl Cowboy Pottery CD (2007)
Lo Esencial album
$17.09 (Click on a track to listen while you're reading: Track 2 is poignant, Track 3 is humorous, track 5 will make you think, and track 7 is soulful) Donât let that title fool ya, folks. This CD is actually a collection of Al Mehlâs original cowboy poetry (not a cupboard full of COWBOY POTTERY). And itâs a darned good collection at that. Now just what is cowboy poetry, you might ask? Well, most folks âround here say that it is âof the cowboy, by the cowboy, and for the cowboy.â Well, not just âforâ the cowboy. Oh sure, over the last century and a half it was mostly recited around the campfire after a hard dayâs work tendinâ cattle. But now itâs for everyone who wants to relive just a little taste of that cowboy life. OK, itâs not just âbyâ the cowboy, either. Of course, livinâ and lovinâ the cowboy life helps to make the poetry authentic. But letâs face it, some of us have more cowboy in our genes than in our jeans. And though itâs mostly âofâ the cowboy, youâll also hear themes of life in the West, and of livinâ off the land, and of better days gone by, and of the cowboy spirit that wells up inside each and every one of us from time to time.Oh yes, and there is one more thing: IT RHYMES! Sounds silly, but lots of poetry these days doesnât rhyme at all. When youâre relivinâ an oral history, though, and tellinâ a story by the fire, the rhyme is key to recitinâ the verses, holdinâ the listenerâs ear, and, most importantly, teachinâ the story to someone new, to be passed on through the ages. So just slip Al a plate of beans and biscuits late at night by the campfire, and hereâs what he might tell ya about all these poems on COWBOY POTTERY, his debut poetry CD:1. COWBOY POTTERY - In this age of new technology, even cowboy poets are learninâ to use computers. So when it was time to open a new file for some of my poems, my hunt-and-peck typing skills caused me to label the folder âCowboy Poteryâ instead of âCowboy Poetry.â The idea of writinâ a poem with the accidental title âCowboy Potteryâ followed. I premiered the poem at Old West Days in Valentine, Nebraska. Needless to say, the audience wasnât sure how to respond when I donned a potterâs apron and brought out a potterâs wheel with a big lump of clay on it, then thanked them all for invitin' me to the Cowboy Pottery Festival. 2. FENCE POSTS MADE OF STONE - As a child, every year or so, weâd pile into the family car to go visitinâ the grandparents in central Kansas. I spent many a warm summer day playinâ on the old stockyard fences from the great trail drive days gone by. But I didnât remember the stone fence posts until some 40 years later. When I saw those stone monuments from the car window, flyinâ down the interstate highway at 70 miles an hour, the memories came floodinâ back. 3. I AIN'T NO COWBOY - Arvada, Colorado, hosts one of the great festivals of cowboy poetry each year in January. I bought a ...
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