| | X Japan Jealousy CD - Import X Japan Discography of CDs
X Japan Jealousy Songs | 1. | A Piano String in Es Dur |
| 2. | Silent Jealousy |
| 3. | Miscast |
| 4. | Desperate Angel |
| 5. | White Wind From Mr. Martin ~ Pata 's Nap ~ |
| 6. | Voiceless Screaming |
| 7. | Stab Me In The Back |
| 8. | Love Replica |
| 9. | Joke |
| 10. | Say Anything |
| Jealousy Review
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Purchase Jealousy CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Celtic Woman The Greatest Journey: Essential Collection CD (2008) Bonus Tracks
Jealousy album
$15.15 Celtic Woman, initially a one-shot collaboration by six leading Irish vocalists for a 2004 PBS special, struck a chord of adoration for the Emerald Isle, a fancy affecting both sides of the Atlantic, and swiftly became a permanent collective. THE GREATEST JOURNEY captures many of the best moments of elegant harmonizing by the act, from their serene and rapturous take on Enya's "Orinoco Flow" to the mournful yet poppily uplifting indigenous folk of "You Raise Me Up."
Import pressing includes two bonus tracks, Mo Ghile Mear (Live ...
| | Chucho Valdes El Ultimo Trago CD (2009)
Jealousy CD music
$14.75
| | Highland Pipers Highland Christmas CD (1998)
Jealousy music CDs
$5.85
| | Voice Of The Sparrow: Very Best Of Edith Piaf CD (1991)
Jealousy songs
$9.15 Also available as part of the Delta 2-CD set THE BEST OF EDITH PIAF.
A very strong best-of collection, VOICE OF THE SPARROW's title is a reference to Edith Piaf's widely used moniker "the Little Sparrow." And it's an apt moniker at that: Piaf was petite, and--in a life filled with tragedy--seemingly vulnerable, ...
| | Clannad 2 CD (1974)
Jealousy album
$15.39 Although best known in the US for their later music, which combined Celtic roots with new age and pop influences, the Irish sibling group Clannad started as a traditional Irish folk group. Indeed, all but three tracks on the group's second album, from 1974, are in Gaelic. The acoustic instrumentation, heavy on the harp and pennywhistle, is lovely but unobtrusive, so that all the focus is on lead singer Maire Brennan's astounding voice.
Every bit as elastic as that of her youngest sister Enya, who would go on to worldwide ...
| | Magical Gathering: A Clannad Anthology CDs (2002) Digipak
Jealousy CD music
$15.65 As a survey of the first quarter century or so of Clannad's recording career, this double-CD compilation is intelligently selected and annotated. It draws pretty evenly from the various phases of the group's lifespan, from their most traditional folk-based albums in 1973 and 1974 to the slicker rock, pop, and new age-influenced sounds that gave them some crossover pop success in Europe and America in the 1980s and 1990s. Their most well-known tracks, and cuts with celebrity cameos, are here: the big early-'80s British hit "Harry's Game," "In a Lifetime" (with Bono of U2), "Something to Believe In" (with Bruce Hornsby), "I Will Find You (Theme From 'The Last of the Mohicans')," and four early-'80s songs on which a young Enya (then known as Eithne Brennan) was a vocalist with the band. No criticism can be levied at the packaging, complete with a 44-page booklet of liner notes. What's more problematic is the variation in quality, as the band changes from an exciting group who merged traditional Irish folk with folk-rock and jazz to a less-exciting, still folk-based one to a more successful but blander group who submerged the folk deeper in contemporary mainstream pop, rock, and new age production. The break is particularly noticeable toward ...
| | Christine Mcvie CD (1984) Reissue
Jealousy music CDs
$5.99 During her years with Fleetwood Mac, Christine McVie only recorded one album. It was released in 1984, after Mirage had run its course and the band was taking an extended break. Given its release date, it's not surprising that Christine McVie sounds like it could have been recorded during the Mirage sessions -- it's a collection of soft rock/pop and ballads that are pleasantly melodic and ingratiating. Only a handful of cuts, such as the wonderfully catchy, lightly bouncy hit single "Got a Hold on Me," work their way into the memory, but nothing on Christine McVie is anything less than agreeable. ...
| | Double Reflex CD (Import)
Jealousy songs
$59.15
| | Venus Peter Best Of V.R. CD (2007) (Import)
$27.59 | | Miki Nakashima Yes CD (2007) (Import)
$26.29 | | Acu Alumni Chorus Sweet Will Of God CD (2007)
Jealousy album
$16.45
| | Voltaire's Bastards No Happy Ending CD (2008)
Jealousy CD music
$12.55 In the Beginning...They were good friends who wanted to be in a band. Unfortunately they couldn’t play any cool instruments (recorder and trombone don’t score high on the babe-o-meter or necessarily lead to world domination). Still, things were good because they were infused with youth and afire with enthusiasm. Much like herpes the latter proved contagious and soon talented people with musical ability were invited (or blackmailed) to join the side-project known as Voltaire’s Bastards. Their first jam space was in the trailer of an eighteen wheeler located in an industrial park. They shared it with an assortment of used carpets and industrial machinery. The hardships were many. It was unheated and poorly insulated making winter jams gruelling. Necessity being the mother of invention, band members soon discovered that drinking lots of beer quickly numbed the pain of frostbite, although it didn’t do much for tuning or timing. But then, that’s why God invented distortion, right? And the distortion was good.From there the band moved in-doors; right into a vegetable warehouse where they set up their jam space and exercised their burgeoning talents on top of a walk-in freezer. All agreed that it was better to play on, rather than in, a freezer. Real Jobs, Higher Education, Girls, Life and Other Distractions...Then it all got messy and complicated. While things may have improved materially for band members, the sense of collective focus became somewhat diffused. People got their own apartments, some got good paying jobs, one went back to school, and the good looking one moved to the West Coast. PS2 came out with what were, at the time, whack graphics and KOTOR ruled code-monkey land. Beer was plentiful. A new band member was drafted, an EP released, breweries were drunk dry, neo-cons tried to take over the world, the cooch-flashing craze while getting out of cars came and went, as did girlfriends, and the world generally went to hell. Despite ...
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