| | WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz CD (2 Customer Reviews)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz Music WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz Songs | 1. | Let's Get Started - Brian Culbertson |
| 2. | Free as the Wind - Jazz Masters |
| 3. | Way You Move, The - Kenny G |
| 4. | Back Into My Heart - Chris Botti |
| 5. | You Make Me Smile - Dave Koz |
| 6. | My Love's Leavin' - Fourplay/Michael McDonald |
| 7. | Chillaxin - Euge Groove |
| 8. | What Does It Take (To Win...) - Peter White |
| 9. | Put Your Records On - Corinne Bailey Rae |
| 10. | Total Experience, The - Boney James |
| 11. | Winelight - Paul Brown |
| 12. | So Amazing - Patti Austin |
| 13. | Dressed to Chill - Marion Meadows |
| 14. | Way Up - Wayman Tisdale |
| WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz Music Review Purchase WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Rare Requests Smooth Jazz Vol. 5 CD (2007)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz album
$13.29
| | Doc Severinsen Night Journey CD (1976)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz CD music
$11.34
| | Season's Greetings From Perry Como CD (1959)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz music CDs
$6.09
| | Roberta Gambarini So In Love CD (2009)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz songs
$12.35
| | 100 Hits Legends-Glenn Miller CD (2009)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz album
$15.15
| | Return To Forever Returns - Live At Montreux 2008 DVD (2008) DTS Sound
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz CD music
$12.05 After a quarter ...
| | New York Renaissance Band Novella CD (2000)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz music CDs
$10.49 This is a continuous in-the-mix CD compiled and mixed by DJ Richard Morel.
INNOCENTS AND ILLUSIONS compiles the albums RENAISSANCE and ILLUSIONS, as well as bonus tracks.
Recorded between 1969 & 1998. Includes liner notes by David Wells.
Throw on this 1977 set from these hard-working prog rockers and you'll quickly realize that E.L.P. and Yes has nothing on these guys. Features five tracks, including "Can You Hear Me?" and "The Sisters."
This double-disc set offers the first two Renaissance albums in state-of-the-art sound, which is a big help, but there's also a lot more than that -- the producers have augmented the group's self-titled debut album with the single edit of "Island," and the B-side "The Sea," a good piano-driven piece that's a killer showcase for Jane Relf's falsetto, as well as the backup singing of Keith Relf. Much more important is the addition on disc two (devoted mostly to the Illusion album) of the four songs that Keith Relf and Jim McCarty recorded before and after the early history of the group, as a duo. "Shining Where the Sun Has Been" is one of the most charming pieces of sunshine pop ever. The pair of 1970 McCarty-Relf sides (which feature McCarty singing), "All the Fallen Angels" are excellent pieces of spaced out psychedelic folk-pop, and "Prayer for Light" is a bravura Jane Relf showcase. These additions add immeasurably to the appeal of the two albums, and also give us a much better picture of some of what McCarty and Relf were doing beyond the finished first album and the thrown-together second album by the group. The annotation also presents the fullest account yet given of the early history of Renaissance, leading up to the establishment of the group's second incarnation. ~ Bruce Eder
The fourth great album in a row for Renaissance, Live at Carnegie Hall was recorded at three concerts on June 20, 21, and 22, 1975, at New York's Carnegie Hall. Although no one could have known it at the time, it also marked the high point of the group's influence and acceptance -- waiting in the wings, at just about the time this album was released the following year, was the punk rock boom and, a little after that, the disco boom, which would quickly sour audiences and critics on progressive rock. Recorded on tour ahead of the release of Scheherazade and Other Stories, this was the most ambitious concert venture to come out of the progressive rock boom of the 1970s up to that time, featuring the group accompanied by the (uncredited) New York Philharmonic, whose playing shows up on several numbers, but is mostly here for "Song of Scheherazade," which took up one side of the original double LP and more than half of the second disc in the CD version. It and the seven other cuts range across the group's repertory, including revamped versions of "Prologue," "Can You Understand," "Carpet of the Sun," and "Ashes Are Burning," plus live versions of "Mother Russia" and "Running Hard" and a concert preview of "Ocean Gypsy." The original LP suffered from the inevitable sound imperfections of live albums, but it was still a good representation of the group in an optimum concert setting -- not surprisingly, the new renditions of the older songs are the tracks that are the most interesting, as they diverge most sharply from the originals, ...
| | Bully Buhlan Seid Ihr Alle Da CD (Import) Germany
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz songs
$9.35 Soft-voiced singer/actor Bully Buhlan appeared in a number of German schlager films and comedies in the '50s in addition to scoring several hits in that country. Seid Ihr Alle Da is one of six anthologies Bear Family Records has compiled on Buhlan, in this case to compile his Polydor recordings from 1952-1956, many of which are taken from films such as Schlagerparade, ...
| | Miles Above Move Or Be Moved CD (2005)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz album
$16.49 2003 was a break through year for MilesAbove. Having signed a deal with Escape/Sony in London, England, the band's first full-length album, "Further" came ...
| | Lowrider Soundtrack 10 The Best CD (2007)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz CD music
$11.75
| | Muffrare Cinema Scape CD (2007)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz music CDs
$15.19
| | Between Dreams Shiver CD (2007)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz songs
$9.35
| | Amr Ismail Land Of Dream CD (2007) (Import)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz album
$18.55
| | Gospel Music Southern Style CD (2005)
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz CD music
$7.29
| | Paul Brett's Sage Paul Brett Sage CD (1970) Remastered
WJJZ Vol. 13 Smooth Jazz music CDs
$17.79 Tying together many of the musical threads of their day, Paul Brett Sage was a progressive band in the best sense of the word, with an adventurous sound that was accessible to all, though they never lost sight of their origins. The group grew out of the folk duo of guitarist/singer ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|