| | Ian Dury Stiff Singles / Peel Session / The Promo Videos CD Ian Dury Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $39.25 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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2008 nine disc (eight CDs and one NTSC/Region 0 DVD) box set featuring all seven of Ian Dury's singles for the Stiff Records label in miniature CD-sized replicas of their original classic sleeves, as well as a four song disc featuring Ian & The Blockheads' one and only session for John Peel (or for any BBC Radio show), which is released for the first time in any format! The box also includes a bonus DVD of Ian and the band's six entertaining promo videos for the singles, which have never been commercially released in any format, and have remained unseen since they were broadcast on a handful of occasions in the late '70s and early '80s. This is perfect for any self-respecting Pub, New Wave or Punk fan. Edsel. Stiff Singles / Peel Session / The Promo Videos Music Stiff Singles / Peel Session / The Promo Videos Review
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Buy Stiff Singles / Peel Session / The Promo Videos CD  | | Ian Dury
11.2 x 14 inch Photo
Price: $14.99 |
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Stiff Singles / Peel Session / The Promo Videos
$15.54 Track list includes "I'm Down,""Drive My Car," "Got To Get You Into My Life," "The Long And Winding Road," "Blackbird," "Eleanor Rigby," "Back In The USSR," "Paperback Writer," "Let It Be," "Hey Jude," "Helter Skelter" and more, plus "Something" rendered on ukulele gifted to Paul by George Harrison, and a tribute to John Lennon in the form of a medley of "A Day In The Life" and "Give Peace A Chance." Wings era chestnuts include "Band On The Run," "My Love," "Let Me Roll It" and the pyrotechnic tour de force of "Live And Let Die," while timeless McCartney solo material ranges from "Here Today" to the upbeat "Flaming Pie" and "Dance Tonight" to a pair of numbers ...
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$39.39 Sony BMG Music Entertainment is proud to release Caution: Life Ahead!, a double CD compilation album featuring some of Australia's great singers and songwriters. All featured artists have donated the tracks on the CD to raise funds for The Buttery, the rehabilitation centre in Northern NSW that offers treatment to those seeking recovery from addiction. The man behind this project is Hoodoo Gurus ...
| | Ashley Tisdale Guilty Pleasure CD (2009)
Stiff Singles / Peel Session / The Promo Videos
$15.65 Graduated from HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL and on the eve of her 24th birthday, Ashley Tisdale is ready to act like an adult, or at least not like a 'tween, on her second album, GUILTY PLEASURE. The title is a giveaway to Ashley's pop aspirations, the cover an indication of her Britney Blackout makeover, the album a curious hodge-podge of every young starlet of the last few years of the decade, big and small, good and bad. Britney, in her post-K-Fed incarnation, is naturally at the foundation, but Ashley also incorporates Ashlee Simpson's junky wannabe rock, Katy Perry's provocative stomp, Fergie's trashy club crawl, some of Christina's theatricality, and Kelly Clarkson's spunk plus, most bizarrely, a bit of Lindsay Lohan's soul-baring second album on "How Do You Love Someone," a song that lashes out at distant dysfunctional parents. This, like so much in Tisdale's career, is a careful pose from a showbiz kid who relishes performing so much she'll try anything just along as she can stay on the stage. That attitude can be a little grating in HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL, because it was amplified in the character of Sharpay Evans, but here it largely works because her total commitment to the game can result in some truly fun disposable pop. Graduated from High School Musical and on the eve of her 24th birthday, Ashley Tisdale is ready to act like an adult, or at least not like a tween, on her second album, Guilty Pleasure. The title is a giveaway to Ashley's pop aspirations, the cover an indication of her Britney Blackout makeover, the album a curious hodge-podge of every young starlet of the last few years of the decade, both big and small, good and bad. Britney, in her post-K-Fed incarnation, is naturally at the foundation, but Ashley also incorporates Ashlee Simpson's junkie-wannabe rock, Katy Perry's provocative stomp, Fergie's trashy club crawl, some of Christina's theatricality, and Kelly Clarkson's spunk plus, most bizarrely, a bit of Lindsay Lohan's soul-baring second album on "How Do You Love Someone," a song that lashes out at distant dysfunctional parents, a song so atypically ugly it stops the album dead. That is, until the realization flashes that this, like so much in Tisdale's career, is a careful pose from a showbiz kid who relishes performing so ...
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