| | Air Supply From The Heart CD Air Supply Discography of CDs
Masters of the soft rock love song that they were, just about any Air Supply compilation could be called FROM THE HEART. But this budget-priced 14-track anthology is perfectly sequenced to feature all of the Australian duo's best known and most beloved songs, including "Lost In Love," "Every Woman in the World," and "All Out of Love." From The Heart Music | List Price | $7.99 (You save $0.44) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Pop CDs, Rock | | Label | Arista | | Orig Year | 2009 | | All Time Sales Rank | 404414  | | CD Universe Part number | 7808471 | | Catalog number | 741268 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Jan 20, 2009 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Harry Maslin; Jay Graydon; Peter Collins; Rick Chertoff; Bob Ezrin; David Foster; Charles Fisher |
Air Supply From The Heart Songs From The Heart Review
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Purchase From The Heart CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Rosanne Cash List CD (2009)
From The Heart album
$15.25 After the dark and chilling themes of 2006's BLACK CADILLAC, which saw Rosanne Cash dealing with the deaths of her mother, Vivian Liberto, her father, Johnny Cash, and her stepmother, June Carter Cash -- all of whom passed within a two-year span -- one might assume that her next project would move into an even deeper level of bleakness, but with THE LIST, it's immediately clear that she has instead found a more measured place to stand. It's a lovely and redemptive outing that looks back to go forward. When Cash turned 18, her father, alarmed that his daughter only knew the songs that were getting played on the radio, gave her a list of what he considered 100 essential American songs; Cash kept that list, and now she's drawn on it for this wonderfully nuanced outing that brims with a kind of redemptive timelessness. THE LIST is a renewal and a testament to life, and it belongs to her father as much as it belongs to her, a beautiful restatement of her father's passions, only now, they've become his daughter's ...
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From The Heart CD music
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| | Ultimate Bee Gees: The 50th Anniversary Collection CDs (2009)
From The Heart songs
$20.15 Functioning as something of a replacement for the 2001 collection Their Greatest Hits: The Record, The Ultimate Bee Gees covers much of the same ground as that double-disc set, albeit in not quite so linear a fashion. ...
| | Beatles Rubber Soul CD (1965) Limited Edition; Remastered; Digipak; Enhanced CD
From The Heart album
$14.09 This reissue of RUBBER SOUL has been digitally re-mastered. It comes packaged with replicated original U.K. album art, an expanded booklet containing original and newly written liner notes, and rare photos. Limited quantities of the CD are embedded with a brief documentary film about the album.
Though some might argue that the Beatles' unprecedented evolution from British Invasion pin-ups to pop music visionaries began with BEATLES FOR SALE, RUBBER SOUL is without a doubt the first album to definitively put the Fab Four in the running for Greatest Band Ever. Virtually every aspect of the Liverpool quartet's incredibly diverse sound is in evidence here: ...
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From The Heart CD music
$72.19 Recorded live at Madison Square Garden, New York, New York on November 27-28, 1969.
Returning to the American concert scene after a three-year layoff, the Rolling Stones recorded GET YER YA-YA'S OUT! during ...
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| | Prince Sign 'O' The Times CDs (1987) Import
From The Heart album
$50.05 Principally recorded at Paisley Park, Minneapolis, Minnesota and Sunset Sound, Los Angeles, California.
After an adventurous run through fields of Beatlesque psychedelia, Prince seemed ready to get back to the task of creating the epic that both his audience and adoring critics had been demanding since PURPLE RAIN. Originally put together as a three-LP opus titled CRYSTAL BALL (but pared down pre-release by the picky artist), SIGN O' THE TIMES wasn't exactly the historic merger of rock and R&B that the world had been expecting. Instead, it played like an ultimate mix-tape of Prince-ly styles--from grinding, house music-inspired funk ("Housequake") to idiosyncratic pieces of irresistibly sweet pop fare ("Starfish And Coffee"). Yet, the man's singular outlook could constantly be identified; and as varied as the music got, that outlook worked as a uniting factor.
Abandoning the Revolution and returning to the one-man-band ethic made the overall sound of SIGN O' THE TIMES far more spare than recent efforts. Various members did make random contributions, and the entire group is featured on a lone live track (the driving extenda-groove, "It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night"); but Prince seemed adamant about unshackling himself from the responsibilities of being a particular band's leader, and constructed an album that reflected his evolving musical vision, rather than the Revolution's signature sound. Though that sound still rears its head--particularly on "Play In The Sunshine"--on SIGN O' THE TIMES, it's only part of the picture.
The other parts are as discombobulated as Prince the one-man-band had always been. Social relevance as a funky turn ("Sign O' The Times"), spiritual strength as heavy metal gospel ("The Cross"), and sex in every form and position possible were all moves Prince had already done, or at least hinted at. But never before had he delivered these moves ...
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