| | M People How Can I Love You More Vinyl LP Record - Import M People Discography of CDs
12 inch single. The Sasha's Master Mix is backed with Rollo's Mix. Simply Vinyl. 2005. How Can I Love You More Music How Can I Love You More Review
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Purchase How Can I Love You More CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Madonna Celebration (2009)
How Can I Love You More album
$7.49
| | Madonna Justify My Love (1993)
How Can I Love You More CD music
$7.49 With the release of the electric "Justify My Love," Madonna (or her record label) had perfected the art of the CD maxi-single, issuing a record with four distinct mixes, each different from the other and sometimes seeming to be completely different songs. The "Orbit 12" Mix (mixed by William Orbit) is a groovier version than the original (which is the first mix on this disc), and brings Lenny Kravitz's background vocals to the forefront. The hip-hop mix (track three) utilizes horns and has additional explicit lyrics and vocals, almost making one feel as if one is winding down in a New York after-hours hip-hop club at 4 a.m. The fifth mix ("The Beast Within Mix") is completely different from the others, almost sounding like a totally different song (which could have been titled "The Beast Within"). Complete with Eastern influences (which would later resurface on the song "Erotica") and totally different lyrics, this mix brings a much more sinister edge to an already dark, seductive song. To round out the single is an additional nine-plus-minutes mix of her 1989 hit "Express Yourself." ...
| | Madonna Hanky Panky (1990)
How Can I Love You More music CDs
$7.49
| | Green Day American Idiot (2004)
How Can I Love You More songs
$5.19 Rock opera and punk are usually two mutually exclusive musical styles. Then again, Green Day has never followed any rock rulebook, so it's not entirely surprising that the trio crafted a punk-rock opera that takes the Bush administration and its policies to task. It doesn't get any more pointed than a couplet from the frenetic title cut that states, "I'm not a part of a redneck agenda/Now everybody do the propaganda!"
Under the guidance of any other group of agitated punks, the results of such an undertaking could easily become didactic. But with creative spearhead Billie Joe Armstrong at the helm, AMERICAN IDIOT is melodically driven, with the kind of intellectual bent that allows for a pair of mini-operas, "Jesus of Suburbia" and "Homecoming." Trimmed with a light sprinkling of piano and a big guitar sound occasionally ...
| | Lady Gaga LoveGame Remixes (2009) 6 versions
How Can I Love You More album
$7.99
| | Radio Dept David CD (2009) Extended Play
How Can I Love You More CD music
$6.35
| | Van Morrison Pay The Devil Vinyl LP (2006)
How Can I Love You More music CDs
$9.89 Over the course of his remarkable career, Van Morrison has ranged so widely across the musical map that it's not exactly a surprise to hear him settling down for a straightforward American roots effort. PAY THE DEVIL, released in 2006 on the Lost Highway label, finds Morrison abandoning any remaining mystical Celtic trappings to tip his hat to the country music of the 1940s and '50s. The arrangements are appropriately spare, with fiddle, steel and acoustic guitar, bass, and drums propping up most of the songs, while strings and backing vocals flesh things out on occasion.
There are three Morrison originals and a handful of songs popularized by Hank Williams ("Your Cheatin' Heart" and "Half As Much," among them) and Webb Pierce ("There Stands the Glass" and "Back Street Affair"), but the selections are all of a piece, sounding as though they're being ...
| | Strings of Consciousness Our Moon Is Full Vinyl LP (2007)
How Can I Love You More songs
$18.75 In experimental circles, electronica-related and otherwise, the mid-2000s marked a slight return to the song format. Call it the logical extension of the underground folk revival or more simply a desire to apply experimental findings to genres of wider appeal, the fact remains that noisy textures, electronic constructs, and post-rock anthems permeated into the song realm, to a point where some reviewers started writing about "electro-acoustic pop." Strings of Consciousness' debut full-length marvelously illustrates how artistically successful this approach can be. The international collective blends acoustic instruments (sax, cello, trumpet, harp, vibraphone) and computer treatments; melodies and texture layers; narratives and abstractions. The group's lineup features seasoned experimentalists Hervé Vincenti, Stefano Tedesco, and Philippe Petit, Spaceheads/Pere Ubu's Andy Diagram, the Sea and Cake's Alison Chesley -- and that's only part of the group's core. Also present are the guest vocalists: Foetus' J.G. Thirlwell, Girls Against Boys' Scott McCloud, and the almighty Barry Adamson, again just to name a few. The music does not blend only sound sources (acoustic/electronic), but genres, too: folk, industrial (the Current 93-tinged "Crystallize It"), even Western in "In Between," featuring a captivating recitation by Pete Simonelli. If the album contains occasional moments of brightness (the short "Defrost_Oven" with wordless vocalizing by Lisa Smith-Klossner), most of it is pretty dark, including the disc's two undisputed ...
| | Aston Martinez Seduction Vinyl LP (2008) (Import)
How Can I Love You More album
$12.85
| | Raw Man War Game Vinyl LP (2008) (Import)
How Can I Love You More CD music
$14.29
| | Kiss the Anus of a Black Cat Nebulous Dreams Vinyl LP (2008) (Import) Belgium
How Can I Love You More music CDs
$17.69 Kiss the Anus of a Black Cat's third full-length, NEBULOUS DREAMS, lends an apocalyptic, doomy edge to an otherwise rollicking kind of folk-rock. The Belgian group twists the nature of acoustic instrumentation here, and creates its own dark and dreary atmospherics over three long tracks. In the process, Black Cat's ...
| | Marduk Those Of The Unlight Vinyl LP (1993)
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$20.99 In the 21st century, it is not uncommon for one of the harsher black metal bands to boast that "no keyboards were used on this album." That is their way of bragging that they consider themselves black metal purists and are distancing themselves from the more musical and melodic bands that comprise the symphonic black metal school of black metal. But when Marduk recorded Those of the Unlight back in 1993, black metal wasn't as diverse as it would later become; therefore, the more abrasive and brutish black metallers didn't feel a need to tell you what set them apart from keyboards-loving black metallers. And the word "brutish" definitely describes Those of the Unlight, which maintains the spirit of rawness that characterized its predecessor, Dark Endless. Granted, Those of the Unlight isn't as extreme as the amelodic grindcore bands that were raising hell in the late '80s and early '90s -- the tunes on this 1993 recording, unlike the grindcore material of death metal's lunatic fringe, have actual song structures -- but at the same time, no one will mistake this album for symphonic black metal. It's too rough and tumble; too jagged, too primal. Those of the Unlight is also mildly uneven; it isn't as consistent as some of the Marduk albums that came later. 2005's Plague Angel on Candlelight, for example, is actually a stronger, more consistent effort than Those ...
| | Sun Ra & His Myth Science Arkestra Cosmic Tones For Mental Therapy Vinyl LP (2009)
$13.75 |
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