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Sing Me A Song Of Songmy Music Freddie Hubbard Sing Me A Song Of Songmy Songs Sing Me A Song Of Songmy Review
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Purchase Sing Me A Song Of Songmy CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Al Jarreau Christmas CD (2008)
Sing Me A Song Of Songmy album
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| | Bruce Kurnow Inner Journey CD (2006)
Sing Me A Song Of Songmy album
$18.99 Bruce Kurnow, currently residing in the San Francisco Bay area, is a multi-instrumentalist who plays keyboards, stringed harp, harmonica and the Gu Zheng (Chinese harp). He received the Minnesota Music Award in 1984, 1987 and 1988 for harmonica and in 1989 for harmonica, harp and keyboards. He is an active recording artist, musician, composer and producer and has compiled an impressive list of credits. Bruce toured the United States and Canada and recorded three albums with the country-rock group Mason Proffit from 1971-1973. (Mason Proffit reunited in 2003 and is touring and recording again.) He performed with groups including Passage, The Doug Maynard Band and Consort and as a soloist in Minneapolis, MN from 1965-1971 and from 1973 until his recent move to the Bay Area. He is in demand as a studio musician and has ...
| | Nick Russo Ro CD (2006)
Sing Me A Song Of Songmy CD music
$17.19 Young guitarist Nick Russo has "+11" embedded on the front cover of this, his debut recording, but there's no eleven-tet collectively for any of the tracks. There are 11 different musicians in various quartet to septet configurations, playing a modern mainstream and progressive jazz that occasionally reflects a world fusion component. Russo uses his electric guitar in single line fashion, crafting melodies and vehicles for group interplay in a program of all original material he has written and arranged. What Russo has accomplished with this introspective music is creating a sonic palette that is balanced, even-handed between all of the instruments, and relatively free of derivation. He expresses no big ego and does not grandstand or wail on any level. Fender Rhodes and acoustic pianist Art Hirahara is on the entire collection, and he is also a voice sublimated for the greater good of the ensemble. The standout piece, the title selection, is a beautiful modal spirit song in recurring beats of eight and a measure of seven, featuring the union of vocalist Miles Griffith and the outstanding tenor saxophonist Mark Turner. Griffith turns in a scat bridge, and the piece flows effortlessly. If you enjoy the musics of Robert Glasper, Avishai Cohen, or Jason Lindner, this will be right up your alley. Close behind in excellence, "Untitled" sports an ostinato repeat intro, completely different from the easy swing main line led by emerging jazz trumpeter Greg Glassman. Perhaps at some point Russo will separate these segments and give them their own lives. There's some attractive, spacy free improv involved in "Little Hands" and the near-11-minute "Please Come Home," both inserting drone box, the former also sporting a Balkan dance motif, the latter with tabla adapting a raga form to creative modern jazz. "Mitzvah" incorporates klezmer, tabla, and Griffith's scat as well as a sung lyric, while "Moy Zaichick" is chameleonic in its rock-funk to hard swinging swivel. At times Russo himself skitters, squeals, or sways, depending on his concept, but is not a high wire artist, nor does he employ sustanato. A little Brazilian music slips in, as does hard bop, and slight dingy blues on "Mmm." Notable rhythm mates on four selections are bassist Matt Clohesy and drummer Ari Hoenig. A project filled with nice ideas and good potential, Russo's expanded discography should be a welcome addition to jazz ...
| | Rens Newland Move That Thing! CD (2006) (Import)
Sing Me A Song Of Songmy music CDs
$14.85 JM-2040-2 Rens Newland ("!Move That Thing"), MOVE THAT THING REFR. Move that thing, to da rhythm of da musec Move that thing, to da fonky beat !Bwegdesding zu dem Rhythmus der Musik Bwegdesding zu dem fonky BeatI’m watching you I can see all the things you do When your nightmares are coming trueI’m watching youI’m painting youIn greys and bluesFrom the shadows of the fewI’m painting youREFR. Move that thing, to da rhythm of da musec Move that thing, to da fonky beat !Bwegdesding zu dem Rhythmus der Musik Bwegdesding zu dem fonky BeatBRIDGE: ...
| | Gilmour Well What Ever CD (2007)
Sing Me A Song Of Songmy songs
$16.45 If someone was to ask me, "Describe the album", I would probably say its"Politically incorrect, non Kenny ...
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Sing Me A Song Of Songmy album
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| | Atomic Brother See Me Comin' CD (2007)
Sing Me A Song Of Songmy CD music
$7.49 See Me Comin' is Atomic Brother's first full-length album and is a collection of 12 original songs. While mainly a hard-rock album, listeners are often surprised at the wide range of styles found on See Me Comin’. After the heavy riffs in “Not My Fault” and the title track “See Me Comin’,” it’s refreshing to find that the band is also capable of playing punk rock tunes like “Employee of the Month,” and even slower songs such as “Home in the Sky” and the Spanish-feeling “Never Home.” With See Me Comin', they decided to focus more on writing good music and less on a particular genre. According to bassist Gnolfo, they were “tired of hearing bands both live and on CD that sound the same from start to finish,” so they decided to focus more on writing good music and less on keeping it within a particular genre. “If it sounds good and we both like it,” stated guitarist/vocalist Melillo, “we’ll use it. Period. A good song is a good song.” In his review of See Me Comin', Robert Pally of Swissrecords.ch certifies that, "Atomic Brother can certainly write powerful songs," and according to Jon Worley of Aiding and Abetting, ...
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