| | El Gringo Algo Sucedio CD El Gringo Discography of CDs
Additional personnel: Jenni Rivera. El Gringo Algo Sucedio Songs Algo Sucedio Review
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Purchase Algo Sucedio CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Joe Veras La Travesia CD (2006)
Algo Sucedio album
$10.39
| | Kinito Mendez Con Sabor A Mi CD (2006)
Algo Sucedio CD music
$10.39
| | Ramon Ayala 15 Exitos Nortenos CD (1995)
Algo Sucedio music CDs
$11.65
| | Alejandro Fernandez CD (1992)
Algo Sucedio songs
$5.69
| | Trio Los Panchos Ayer, Hoy Y Siempre CD (1995)
Algo Sucedio album
$9.09
| | Vico-C Babilla CD (2007)
Algo Sucedio CD music
$11.39
| | Jude Taylor Zydeco Bayou! CD (1997)
Algo Sucedio music CDs
$14.29
| | Last Poets Holy Terror CD (1994)
Algo Sucedio songs
$13.15 With Holy Terror, the Last Poets lay their claim to be the originators of hip-hop. Containing some of the Poets' most trenchant political and social lyrics, Holy Terror shows the Last Poets, Umar Bin Hassan and Abiodun Oyewole, still as fiery and sharp as ever. "Homesick" and "Pelourinho" are descriptions of slavery that are as vivid and riveting as any movie. "Black Rage" paints a portrait of urban hell that will chill any listener to the bone. The album is also superbly produced, with a funk sound that supports the lyrics while never overshadowing them. Credit is due to seminal producer Bill Laswell, who, armed with a first-class band made up of P-Funk alumni George Clinton, Bootsy Collins, and Bernie Worrell, along with Grandmaster Melle Mel, constructs dense, intricate grooves that are simultaneously modern and traditional. For both fans of the classic Last Poets albums and newcomers interested in one of the missing links between classic funk and modern hip-hop, Holy Terror is worth a listen. ~ Victor W. Valdivia
"The Last Poets were the first real hardcore rappers." --Ice CubeThose who believe that there are no second acts in American lives ought to consider the career of post-apocalyptic urban griots The Last Poets. Hailed for the fiery intensity of their politics and their poetry from the moment they emerged in the late Sixties, The Last Poets spit forth a series of brilliant albums in the Seventies, split up and nearly guttered out in the Eighties, and have re-emerged in the Nineties into the embrace of a new generation of word-intoxicated rappers who recognize that the Poets' fire and intelligence are more necessary than ever. For the first time in over twenty years, original members Umar Bin Hassan and Abiodun Oyewole (aka Dune) reunited under The Last Poets banner and released HOLY TERROR, an album as vital and relevant today as any work by the Poets in the 70's. Produced by Bill Laswell, HOLY TERROR features additional lyrics and vocals by Grandmaster Melle Mel, and fat, funky grooves from Bootsy Collins and Bernie Worrell. The album also features a bonus remix track with guest vocals by George Clinton.Born on Malcolm X Day in 1968, The Last Poets took their name from a poem by South African poet Willie Kgositsile, who posited the necessity of putting aside poetry in the face of looming revolution. "When the moment hatches in time's womb there will be no art talk. The only poem you will hear will be the spearpoint pivoted in the punctured marrow of the villain," he wrote. "Therefore we are the last poets of the world." They established their reputation with their first two albums, THE LAST POETS (1970) (which included "Niggers are Scared of Revolution") and THIS IS MADNESS (1971), both of which are recognized today as classics.The personal history of the group comprises "a tangled story," as the Washington Post's David Mills has noted. "Seven men in all have recorded as The Last Poets, though never at the same moment. They have feuded among themselves almost from the beginning." After feuds splintered the original group in the mid-seventies, both Umar and Dune turned to the streets. Dune traveled to the South where he took Willie Kgositsile's message to heart. He put down the pen and picked up a gun, and soon ...
| | Wild Blue Above And Beyond CD (2004)
Algo Sucedio album
$12.65
| | Phunk Junkeez Hydro Phonic CD (2007)
Algo Sucedio CD music
$12.65
| | Amanda Shaw Pretty Runs Out CD (2008)
Algo Sucedio music CDs
$15.05
| | Stace England Salt Sex Slaves CD (2007)
Algo Sucedio songs
$9.69 "Revises the Stones sex-drugs-rock paradigm: history-epiphany-insight. Four Stars."- UNCUT, UK“After 'Greetings From Cairo' another fascinating piece of unsurpassed songwriting. Four Stars.” - KEYS AND CHORDS“None of this story would matter here if the music and lyrics on Salt Sex Slaves weren’t worthwhile, intelligent and, to use a hackneyed word, deep. Even setting aside the documentary nature of England’s record, fans of alt.country, Americana, folk and plain old rock & roll will enjoy this CD. Five out of Five rating.” - NEWS 4 U“The music recalls the Stones in their best years but is slightly more Americana in style. At first listen the CD is remarkable as a whole but then it even grows further on you. Stace England has already been embraced by a small circle but with Salt Sex Slaves he seems ready for a much bigger audience.” - VELVET MUSIC“The alt.country / Americana scene has been full of expectation about what this CD will bring. And it's a lot, because ever since the first listen, we are again deeply impressed.” - ROOTSTIME, BELGUIM“Stace England has ...
| | Pathaan's Universal Sunset CDs (2005) (Import) Import; United Kingdom
Algo Sucedio album
$46.15
| | Center Of The Universe Simulacra CD (Import)
Algo Sucedio CD music
$17.49 «Simulacra» is the second part in The Center of the Universe's ongoing trilogy about time and space. The theme of the album is misplacement in space. If there were no space, everything would be at the same point, packed together like matter in a black hole. Extremely dense and with collected sounds from various instruments crashed together at high speeds, this is the album equivalent of a pitch black room with lightning as the only source of light. Noises and reverberations from non-euclidean structures are strictly systematised and condensed into a groove that shifts in dimension, from one particle to a galaxy in the blink of an eye. In this space-less space, the music tries to sound like the music of the real world, like a tree resembling a crooked man, a dragon seen in clouds, or a face seen on the surface of a stone.As usual, the Cd is contained in an extremely elegant sleeve by the designers Yokoland.Center of the Universe (C.O.U.) started as a reaction to the solitary feeling of beeing the only guy around who was equally crazy about Eastern European folk music, jungle, French progressive rock from the seventies and lo-fi. The musical climate in Oslo's suburbia was so depressive in the early nineties that any attempt to make happy and experimental music at the same time was bound to be unpopular. Sissyfus, the only member of C.O.U., gave himself ten years to achieve cult-status. The first years he spent as a "casette only" artist in the spooky village Skjetten, then he moved to Oslo. Unwilling to send demos and even more unwilling to drink beer with the "right" people, Sissyfus made the very first Metronomicon-CD-R and the rest is history (but it’s not this history because this is a text about the Center of the Universe not the story of Metronomicon Audio, even if these stories have pretty much in common).Being rejected by the conservative Rock n' Roll hegemony in Oslo (at least the first years), the Center of the Universe was "discovered" by the famous playstation-duo Töyen, and they played his songs on the radio. Finding an audience in techno clubs, art spaces, illegal parties and in people’s homes, the C.O.U. made a lot of concerts and released a lot of CD-Rs the following years. Sometimes alone and sometimes together ...
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