| | REO Speedwagon Live: You Get What You Play For CD REO Speedwagon Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
Highlights include the rockers "Like You Do" and "Keep Pushin'," but the CD version of LIVE: YOU GET WHAT YOU PLAY FOR cuts out several songs originally included on the double record version (such as a cover of Chuck Berry's "Little Queenie" and an extended solo by guitarist Gary Richrath).
2 LPs on 1 CD; with 1 song missing.
1977's LIVE: YOU GET WHAT YOU PLAY FOR does a splendid job of capturing a young and hungry REO Speedwagon in full-on concert mode. Before REO conquered the charts after re-inventing themselves as a pop-heavy outfit in the early '80s, the band was a non-stop touring machine, specializing in good time rockin' tunes and the odd ballad here and there--which is exactly what you get with LIVE. Live: You Get What You Play For Music Live: You Get What You Play For Music Review Purchase Live: You Get What You Play For CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Bryan Ferry Boys And Girls CD (1985) Remastered
Live: You Get What You Play For album
$11.69 All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology.
Ferry's first solo effort since the second breakup of Roxy Music is arguably his best, in part because it continues in the direction the band had been going. It's like AVALON, only more so.
Here, Ferry's lounge lizard affectations are writ large; the lyrical pose is all bruised romantic fatalism (say hello, "Slave to Love"), and the music fits it like a glove. The album's soundscapes are lush and echo-laden, and nearly every track has a discreet disco pulse; "Valentine," the one exception, is mid-tempo reggae. Overlaid with skittish percussion and guitars, BOYS AND GIRLS is the aural equivalent of a white dinner jacket and a half-empty bottle of champagne.
Personnel: ...
| | Laura Branigan Self Control CD (1984)
Live: You Get What You Play For CD music
$6.09 Laura Branigan's third album capitalized on the Euro-dance-pop and affecting ballads that made her an international star while allowing her to grow as a vocalist. Her collections, always uneven in terms of material, benefit mostly from her stellar voice, and this is no exception."The Lucky One" and "Heart" start slow and build to a crescendo, perfectly showcasing her range without being obvious. The title track, about finding sex in the seamy side of town, sparked a bit of a controversy, but ended up being her second biggest hit. The song itself works, but Branigan was never a sex bomb, so the fact that she pulls it off is indicative of her power as a performer. "Ti Amo" is the album's theatrical ballad, which works well with breathy, dramatic vocals. She even pulls off a graceful cover of "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow" that is clear and simple, while "Breaking Out" and "Take Me" are perfect examples of synthesizer-driven '80s dance ditties. The only slow moments come with "Silent Partners" and "With Every Beat of My ...
| | Unlikely Angel DVD (1996)
Live: You Get What You Play For music CDs
$5.69 Country music legend Dolly Parton lends her sunny charm to the heartwarming made-for-TV film UNLIKELY ANGEL. When hard-living barroom singer Ruby Diamond (Parton) dies in a car ...
| | Rick Springfield Living In Oz CD (1983)
Live: You Get What You Play For songs
$5.95 Though this was Rick Springfield's ninth album, it seemed like the third to most pop music fans, as it came on the heels of his breakthrough, Working Class Dog, and its successful follow-up, Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet. And though this contained as many hits as the aforementioned collections, it isn't remembered as quite the same in terms of accomplishment; this may be because it is so personal that it's just not as accessible. Living in Oz is Springfield's response to the dance-pop wave that was just starting to build and would be prominent until grunge announced its presence, as well as his response to the naysayers who wouldn't accept him as a serious musician. Where earlier hits, like "Jessie's Girl" and "Don't Talk to Strangers," were well-crafted pop tunes, on this release he shows an edge and a maturity he ...
| | LaBelle Nightbirds CD (1974)
Live: You Get What You Play For album
$5.95 After two commercially ...
| | REO Speedwagon Nine Lives CD (1979)
Live: You Get What You Play For CD music
$5.95
| | Small Faces Best Of Immediate CD (2000) (Import) Japan
Live: You Get What You Play For music CDs
$40.75
| | T H C Teens Hate Chains CD (2003) (Import) Japan
Live: You Get What You Play For songs
$40.75
| | Don't Be No Square, Get Hip To Quezerque CD (2005)
Live: You Get What You Play For album
$13.25
| | Slygo Game CD (2008)
Live: You Get What You Play For CD music
$16.45 LOUISVILLE ECCENTRIC OBSERVER 1/19/05 by Stephen George"I have never cared for bands like ...
| | LT Grace Destinations CD (2008)
Live: You Get What You Play For music CDs
$16.45
| | Johnn Band Van Zant No More Dirty Deals Special Edition CD (2008) (Import) Import
Live: You Get What You Play For songs
$42.05 Special Edition
| | Nazca Lines Cremation/Cruises CD
Live: You Get What You Play For album
$16.45
| | Frank Zappa Strictly Commercial-Best CD (2008) (Import) Japan
Live: You Get What You Play For CD music
$59.15
| | J-dub I Go Back CD (2008)
Live: You Get What You Play For music CDs
$16.45 JDUB is a dynamic Christian Rap artist who has one focus - spread the message and love of Jesus Christ, wherever he goes. With a degree in Biblical Studies from Palm Beach Atlantic University, JDUB sees himself first and foremost as a minister of the Gospel. But the tool he most uses to minister that life-changing message is hip-hop music. His fun, energetic, and entertaining music is also powerful and enlightening. At age 13, JDUB recorded his first rap song, ...
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