| | Sonny Criss Up Up And Away CD - Import Sonny Criss Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $17.55 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 2 available)
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Sonny Criss Up Up And Away Songs | 1. | Up, Up And Away | |
| 2. | Willow Weep For Me | $0.99 | |
| 3. | This Is For Benny | |
| 4. | Sunny | |
| 5. | Scrapple From The Apple | |
| 6. | Paris Blues | |
| Up Up And Away Review
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$12.09 Due to an excess of routine appearances by a vocal group called "the King's Jesters," this CD is not quite as essential to early jazz collectors as the first two in this series, but it is worth picking up. C-melody saxophonist Frankie Trumbauer finally received his due in TOM's series, which reissued not only all of his early sessions as a leader (other than the very familiar selections with cornetist Bix Beiderbecke), but his features ...
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$8.55 Perhaps my interest was peaked because of the way light reflected off the surface, beaming into my unknowing eyes. Maybe its majestic appearance in such a dull room pulled me toward it. Either way, I was attracted. I floated toward it; fascinated, I had no idea what I was getting myself into. But how could I have? I was only two years old! Governed solely by the Epicurean principles of aesthetics, I knew nothing of logic and rhetoric. Put simply, I saw what I wanted, and I went for it. Sleek and smooth, its body was magnificent, unlike anything I had ever seen. I picked it up; rather, it fell on top of me. Instead of crying, I remained in an unusual state of awe-filled concentration. I plucked a string-it resonated sound throughout the room. I giggled. Ah, my first jam session. By three years old, I had become an acoustic singer/songwriter. Working with a bulky classical acoustic at least twice my size, I belted, "guitar, guitar, guitar, guitar," at the top of my lungs, harmonizing with a melodic staccato rhythm fit for the free jazz era. When I started playing seriously during high school, the guitar's purpose had considerably transformed since my first original song, "Guitar," or my first lessons in the fourth grade. Music had become an outlet for my frustrations. Having moved across the country twice in one year, life was often difficult. I was placed in socially awkward situations, and my world was thrown into a chaotic whirlwind of change. But when I played guitar, when I sang, my problems were erased. Music was my opiate; I was addicted, and at times, it was the only thing that could make me content. It was my therapy; the spaces between the strings were a filter for all of my frustrations--ten minutes alone with my guitar after a rough day would completely reverse my attitude. When I was 17, I began playing shows with "Among The Hidden" as a singer/guitarist/songwriter. The band has helped me grow over the last few years, and the bonds I have formed with my band-mates are cast in iron. I knew deep down, however, that I wanted to simultaneously guide my art toward a divergent path. In 2004, I began writing songs for a solo project, incorporating a different ...
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$10.15 Eddy Jambo originally started to get into music in Sixth Grade with a Trombone when he learned how to read music. He began to play guitar in 8th grade, singing and playing acoustically. Thanks to his Dad being an audiophile, he listened to many different genres of music. It wasn’t till later on in his life he began to play blues, using it as a therapeutic way of expressing himself. His uncle Zaven Jambazian, a harmonica player who played with some well known blues artists such as Rod Piazza, Johnny Turner, Johnny Fulton, Otis Rush, Robert Cray, and most likely others, served as an influential and inspirational figure to Eddy Jambo. A few years ago, Eddy began to pick up the bass while being in a band in the Sacramento area, and in the years prior to that he had been experimenting with the keyboards. As he separated from that band he began to work on recording himself playing bass and using the keyboard for a drum beat along with guitar and singing to make songs. His first CD, “When Jambo Gitz Da Bluz”, released in 2006, was meant to be more blues/rock inspired with the availability of using it as a soundtrack. Shortly before the release ...
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$10.15 Night Flowers – The BiographyNight Flowers is a rabblerousing girl-boy-girl band based in Toronto that is writing the fuzzy alternative rock soundtrack to life. It was in the summer of 2007, with Tara and Sködt freshly charged from recording in the sunny south, when they met an even sunnier Kimpossible. The music that they now create bring the flowers of the sixties to meet the grunge of the nineties in a melodic journey of distortion pedals, fuzz bass and three-part vocal harmonies. The trio’s first EP is a waving motorcade of parading protest, angsty anthems, grungy guitar rallies and sonic suggestions which was self-produced and recorded in their rehearsal studio, mixed by Jordon Zadorozny (Sam Roberts, Abbey) and mastered by Juno award nominee João Carvalho. The procession begins with ‘Man of the People’. Tongue-in cheek, riffy and raucous, this song urges one to wake up and smell the roses, but to also trip the light fantastic! In ‘Pep Rally’, the theme of control, dominance and the struggle to be on top reaches an apex as it is sung by a cool and not-so-sure cheerleader, supported by a pyramid of fuzz bass and guitar.What others think: “I'm liking the sound, raw, rapidfire riffs, a bit of thunder, a bit of seduction. Really captures the spirit of classic-meets-glam rock. The flame lives.” – Ben ...
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