| | Kazuyoshi Saito Niji CD Single - Import Kazuyoshi Saito Discography of CDs
Niji Music | List Price | $22.99 (You save $2.00) | | Category | World Albums, CD singles CDs | | Label | Phantom | | CD Universe Part number | 7489623 | | Catalog number | 708339 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Sep 11, 2007 |
Niji Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Kazuyoshi Saito Niji CD Single - Import. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Niji CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | David Bowie ChangesBowie CD (1990)
Niji album
$9.75 Long before Madonna started changing hairstyles between albums, David Bowie set the standard (and continues to do so) for chameleonic music styles that go beyond mere hair dye. CHANGESBOWIE is the perfect road map that allows the listener to hear the different pitstops Bowie made into the mid-'80s. Throughout the '70s, Bowie's personas included space alien ("Ziggy Stardust," "Suffragette City"), theatrical raconteur ("Rebel, Rebel"), blue-eyed soulster ("Young Americans") and Thin White Duke ("Golden Years"). After spending time in Berlin under self-imposed exile ("Heroes"), he returned to the West and within a few short years, David Bowie was back on the top of the charts thanks to a dance-rock collaboration with Nile Rodgers ("Let's Dance"). Bowie's constant need to reinvent himself is so pervasive that upon originally releasing this collection on Rykodisc, he returned to the studio and recorded an updated, '90s remix of "Fame" that sounds as if Art Of Noise were his back-up band.
Bowie's 1990 hits compilation, deleted in the U.S. Contains 18 of the Thin White Duke's finest from 1969-1990, all digitally remastered. Includes 'Space Oddity', 'Changes', 'Suffragette City', 'Rebel Rebel', 'Young Americans', 'Golden Years', 'Ashes To Ashes', 'Let's Dance' and 'Blue Jean'. 1990 release.
A notable reissue of the heretofore out-of-print in the U.S. collection from England's premier glam rocker. This latter day edition incorporates tracks from 'Changestwobowie' into this single volume, 'Changesbowie'. Originally released at the end of the ...
| | Van Morrison Tupelo Honey CD (1971) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Remastered & Expanded
Niji CD music
$11.49 Part of Van Morrison's living-in-the-country-and-taking-life-easy series of early-1970s albums, TUPELO HONEY is full of the organic mix of soul, folk, blues, and rock that was his signature sound at the time. The freewheeling "Wild Night" bursts at the seams with the pure joy of living, carried along by R&B horns and Morrison's own soulful invocations. "Old Old Woodstock" and the title track are songs of devotion to home and hearth, indicative of the mood prevailing at the time, as the acid-rock excesses of the '60s gave way to a more down-home sound à la the Band, CSNY, et al. Nevertheless, even though he spent some time with his feet up in front of the fireplace, Morrison was always too much of a soul man at heart to remain low-key for long, as evidenced by the up-tempo closing tune, "Moonshine Whiskey."
Tupelo Honey is typical of Van Morrison's early-'70s work in both sound and structure; after dispensing with the requisite hit -- here, the buoyant, R&B-inflected "Wild Night" -- he truly gets down to business, settling into a luminously pastoral drift typified by the nostalgic "Old Old Woodstock." At the heart of the record are a pair of stunning love songs, "You're My Woman" and the hymn-like title cut, one of Morrison's most enduring and transcendent compositions. [As part of a massive remastering and reissue campaign, virtually every major Morrison title (and many minor ones) were reissued, like Tupelo Honey, with a pair of bonus cuts. These include a much longer alternative take of "Wild Night" (where you get a lot more Ronnie Montrose guitar and a popping, more elaborate horn chart). The other is, and no, we're not kidding, a raggedy, largely acoustic version of "Down by the Riverside" ...
| | Metallica Memory Remains (1997)
Niji music CDs
$4.19
| | Juno Reactor Hotaka (2002) Single
Niji songs
$6.99
|  | | Also Bought |
| Jay-Z Run This Town Vinyl LP (2009)
Niji album
$5.89
| | Boris Japanese Heavy Rock Hits Vol. 2 Vinyl LP (2009)
Niji CD music
$6.35
| | Erasure Solsbury Hill (2003)
Niji music CDs
$7.65 Erasure gives the classic Peter Gabriel song the treatment, 'Solsbury Hill', this maxi single offers 8 audio tracks ...
| | Melody Next To You (2005) (Import) Japan
Niji songs
$17.09
| | Jiro Kanmuri Ryogen No Ookami-Wakaki Hi No Jingis (2007) (Import)
$15.75 | | Laula Ashita Ni Saku Hana (2007) (Import)
$15.75 | | Nana Movin' On (2007) (Import)
Niji album
$20.99
| | Ora Mate Kamate (2007) (Import)
Niji CD music
$9.19
| | Marble Index Watch Your Candles Watch Your Knives CD (2006)
Niji music CDs
$12.49 The Marble Index excited a good deal of interest with the muscular punch of their self-titled debut album, a disc critics often tipped into the garage heap. That's unlikely to be the fate of their sophomore set, not because the trio have left their verve behind, but because they've brilliantly refined their sound. And that sound, thanks to Scott Shields' exceptional production, is big and bold, splashy and brash, much like Marble itself. Even so, Shields astutely brings to the fore all the subtle nuances of the trio's music, much of which was only partially apparent in the past. For example, by bending a single guitar note, Brad Germain can momentarily transform an angular post-punker like "I Don' Want to Try to Change Your Life" into an evocative western, or with a single chord change evoke the Beatles, as he does on "All That I Know." Watch Your Candles Watch Your Knives is filled with these supple genre shifts. The thoroughly infectious "Know" splashes from the exhilaration of old-school punk to the exuberance of the British Invasion, while "Couldn't Do Without" surfs down the "Pipeline" between Gang of Four-ish verses and a '60s flavored pop chorus. Elsewhere, garage punk is mixed up with gothic drones; goth rock swirls around the indie scene and the new wave, and edgy, bass-driven rhythms slide into smoother pop. "We Always Complain" has it all -- swirly psychedelia, chant-along rabble-rousing, a fiery rock chorus, and verses that would feel equally at home in Carnaby Street or the '80s indie scene. The sheer beauty of it is, the trio never draw attention to their exceedingly clever arrangements, so seamless are the shifts, so supple the song's structures, ...
| | Kiyoharu Satsukiame (2008) (Import)
$27.59 | | Flauscheflocke (2008) (Import)
Niji songs
$15.75
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|