| | Paradox Electrify CD - Import Paradox Discography of CDs
Paradox Electrify Songs | 1. | Second Over Third by Force |
| 2. | Paralyzed |
| 3. | Monument |
| 4. | Portrait in Grey |
| 5. | Hyperspeed Hallucination |
| 6. | Bridge to Silence |
| 7. | Infected |
| 8. | Disconnected |
| 9. | Cyberspace |
| 10. | Electrify |
| 11. | Good Morning [*] |
| Electrify Review
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Purchase Electrify CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Eminem Relapse CD (2009)
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$9.49 Lyrical acrobat Slim Shady returns after a five-year absence with his fifth major label release, continuing to strike the perfect balance between brooding insight and absolute silliness on 2009's RELAPSE. Opening single "Crack a Bottle" reunites Detroit's maddest rapper with his superstar mentor (Dr. Dre) and protege (50 Cent) on a fittingly funky tour de force.
Eminem's RELAPSE, a double album released after five years of recorded silence, a record featuring Dr. Dre behind the boards for the first time since 2000, faced no shortage of the relentless pressure of expectations. A narrative of survival after facing down his demons in rehab unfurled with Eminem's usual twisted Swift-ian wit, RELAPSE should disappoint few fans (or critics for that matter) with its patented mix of hilariously spit venom and delirious self-loathing.
Like Darren Aronofsky's adaptation of REQUIEM FOR A DREAM, 2009's RELAPSE finds the full horror element in drug ...
| | Prince Purple Rain CD (1984) SDTK
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$9.89 A soundtrack to a movie so appalling that it is infinitely wiser to let the record stand on its own merits. While Prince cavorted in purple kitchen foil and rode his Harley in high heels, the real star of the film, the music, was doing all the talking. A knit of funk and rock, a heavily stylized Hendrix guitar lick here and there, and a wilfully danceable backbeat all made for a huge commercial smash, and the first real international introduction for many people to a star-in-waiting. 'Darling Nikki' ...
| | Drake So Far Gone CD (2009)
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$8.69 No doubt about it, Drake blew up big time in 2009. The one-time TV actor (from DEGRASSI HIGH: THE NEXT GENERATION) hooked up with Lil Wayne a couple years previously, worked the mixtape and collabo circuit for a spell and then suddenly hit with the song "Best I Ever Had." The song was taken from the SO FAR GONE mixtape and became the top summer jam of 2009. After a ferocious bidding war, Drake ended up signing with Universal Motown (while keeping his affiliation with Weezy's Young Money and Cash Money intact) and was officially introduced via the SO FAR GONE EP. The release included seven tracks from the mixtape and gave undeniable proof that the hype and noise surrounding the rapper were all justified. The productions (courtesy of members of Drake's Toronto-based crew) are nuanced and powerful, the hooks are huge and ...
| | 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection: The Best Of Brook Benton CD (2000)
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$7.15 This is part of MCA's 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection series.
20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The ...
| | Haystak Came A Long Way CD (2009)
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$11.85
| | Usher Confessions: Special Edition CD (2004) Special Edition
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$9.59 Usher has been a symbol of tender sexuality ever since he shifted from teenage sensation to soulful superstar. He's breathtakingly good at what he does; possessing that undefinable essence known to a select few soul crooners (Al Green, D'Angelo, etc.) who radiate sensuality through song, Usher has reached an apex on the sultry CONFESSIONS, his fifth studio album.
After the obligatory intro, Lil Jon kicks in with his exhortations on the catchy, dance-floor-ready single "Yeah." Usher follows that up with the sublimely sweet "Throwback," a torch song with a fantastic Motown hook. On "Confessions Part II," he exposes his most vulnerable side when admitting to his lover that he's fathered a child with another woman. Exemplifying his versatility, Usher follows the standard pop ballad "Simple Things" with the guitar-riff-driven "Bad Girl," somewhere between 1970s funk and '80s Prince. CONFESSIONS is the sound of an R&B luminary at t
Includes 4 New Tracks Prev.#Ari 52141
Personnel: Usher (vocals); Ludacris, Lil Jon (rap vocals); Thicke, Rich Harrison (various instruments); Bobby ...
| | Roger Taylor Happiness? CD (1994) England
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$12.05 This 1994 pop/rock outing by Queen drummer Roger Taylor includes "Foreign Sand," "Loneliness," and "Dear Mr. Murdoch."
Taylor's first official solo effort in ten years, Happiness? is a politically themed album that tackles various issues such as the rise of neo-Nazis ("Nazis 1994"), the plight of Third World peoples ("Revelation"), and political and religious hypocrisy ("The Key"). In large measure, Taylor has abandoned the upbeat rock that dominated his first solo efforts for a more produced record of ballads and mid-tempo tracks. And while the album sounds good, it's hard ...
| | Widespread Panic Live At Myrtle Beach CDs (2005)
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$21.49 The members of Widespread Panic seem to have contented themselves with the notion of the band's audience being exactly what it is. Given the records they've issued in the last couple of years, they no longer seem ambitious about growing to reach anyone else. (For one thing, when was the last time the band did a studio recording?) This is too bad, because the world of popular music is almost always one of diminishing returns: if a band has no ambition, many of its own fans will eventually grow tired and look elsewhere for excitement. Live at Myrtle Beach is a rote set by a band that is increasingly becoming rote in its method and expression. If you are a "spreadhead," there may be something here for you in these live versions of songs that have been trotted out before along with a couple of interesting covers -- most notably "Dirty Business," originally done by the New Riders of the Purple Sage. The other cover is Robert Johnson's "Stop Breakin' Down Blues," which is workmanlike and doesn't get to the heights it could on a more inspired set. Ultimately, this is exactly what you'd expect, two discs ...
| | Tim Version Decline Of The Southern Gentleman CD (2008)
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$11.79
| | Gonzales Soft Power CD (2008)
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$18.09
| | Ray Charles Whatd I Say / Ray Charle CD (2008) (Import)
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$15.05
| | D-Bo Deovolente CD (2008) (Import)
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$43.35
| | Michael Reid Massa God Ah God CD (2008)
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$16.45
| | Millions Gather Scatter CD (2009)
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$11.39 Not until the metal world decided to take the angular and math induced sounds of Touch and Go and invent Metalcore (which would spawn the Screamo scene) did the notions of such legends as Shellac and Slint get a second, updated viewing. Millions, existing firmly outside of that last decade of the 20th century, have managed to put together an album that not only pays immense homage to the sounds of "pure" indie Chicago, but fuses it with the stylistic developments that came afterwards thanks to the tinkering of highly technical metal nerds like Cave In or Botch. The opener, "Lest the Professor Catch Fire," is a prime example of the latter, a metalcore pummeller that is equaled only by the best established bands in the genre. Thankfully, Millions chooses not to devote all of their energy to such a sound, although they certainly have the chops to do so -- the band's rhythm section is a monster, and the guitar playing is at once a math metal monolith as well as a nod to the tech-Death of Chuck Schuldiner, choosing to opt for a bit of `retro' is a welcome shift track to track on Gather Scatter. This album can sometimes seem like it exists out of time, parts resembling a capsule of Chicago at its angular peak, with other sections a glorification of metal core before it got co-opted by angsty teens with too much hair gel, but the truth is, these guys pull it off. Millions have the ...
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