| | Stevie Wonder Jungle Fever CD - Import Stevie Wonder Discography of CDs
Japanese only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD - playable on all CD players) paper sleeve pressing. Universal. 2009. Stevie Wonder Jungle Fever Songs | 1. | Fun Day | $0.99 | |
| 2. | Queen In The Black | $0.99 | |
| 3. | These Three Words  | $0.99 | |
| 4. | Each Other's Throat | $0.99 | |
| 5. | If She Breaks Your Heart | $0.99 | |
| 6. | Gotta Have You  | $0.99 | |
| 7. | Make Sure You're Sure | $0.99 | |
| 8. | Jungle Fever | $0.99 | |
| 9. | I Go Sailing | $0.99 | |
| 10. | Chemical Love | $0.99 | |
| 11. | Lighting Up The Candles | $0.99 | |
| Jungle Fever Review
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Purchase Jungle Fever CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Shakira She Wolf CD (2009)
Jungle Fever album
$11.18 Last time around, Shakira touched upon so many styles she couldn't be contained on one album, splitting Oral Fixation in two. This time, she focuses on one sound only: a pulsating electro-disco that crosses all boundaries and welcomes all nationalities. Such concentration behooves Shakira, freeing her to release her inner She Wolf, a wild wacko who's as coo coo as she is carnal. And for as sexy as Shakira is -- crucially, her music is sexy too -- what really gives She Wolf its bite is her inspired nuttiness, how she laments that Matt Damon's not meant for her, and wishes her ex-lover and his new girl a horrible vacation where the room smells and the toilet doesn't ...
| | Max Minelli Pain Medicine CD (2009)
Jungle Fever CD music
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| | Angie Stone Unexpected CD (2009)
Jungle Fever music CDs
$13.10 On her second album for Concord's Stax imprint (and fourth overall), Angie Stone delves deeper into funk and hip-hop than on her previous outings. Her last offering, The Art of Love & War, was a critical and commercial triumph for the vastly underrated vocalist, and topped the Billboard chart. With a slew of producers including Sly Williams, Willie "Chuck" Shivers, Karrim King and Fitzroy Reid, Steven "Supe" White, Jonathan Richmond, Jazze Pha, and Stone herself, these dozen tracks continue to reveal her versatility as a vocalist and recording artist; she can sing whatever it is she wants to with equal verve, authenticity, and flair. Despite the slicker and more diverse sounds on Unexpected, the soul quotient is high, even if this isn't strictly a neo-soul album. The new beat consciousness reveals itself most on the title track, which is hard funk at its 2009 best. Cuts such as "Free" might have come right out of the 1990s with their use of careening synths, shimmering hip-hop beats, and colliding loops. But ...
| | Z-Ro Cocaine CD (2009)
Jungle Fever songs
$15.05 Despite his status as one of hip-hop's most prolific artists, Z-Ro never quite spreads himself too thin. The provocatively titled COCAINE is his second release from 2009, and features his trademark self-aware, yet rapier-sharp lyrics over some of the hotter beats out of the fertile Houston scene. The Intro skilfully sets out the landscape as the dark-vocaled MC reflects upon his choice of a life of street dealing without a shred of remorse, while stressing his decision was not exactly the wise one. From there, Z-Ro, an expert storyteller, wanders from tale to tale, each one delivered with a novelist's touch, on a record which somehow transcends cookie-cutter.
In 2009, Z-Ro's loyal fan base expected Heroin, a two-CD set announced the previous year, but instead they got Cocaine, a one-CD version with many songs that already ...
| | Pitbull Rebelution CD (2009)
Jungle Fever album
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| | Daptone Gold CD (2009) Digipak
Jungle Fever CD music
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| | Los Tigres Del Norte Herencia Musical: 20 Corridos Inolvidables CD (2003)
Jungle Fever music CDs
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| | Arland Henry & Soeh Die Goldene Klarinette CD (2008) (Import)
Jungle Fever songs
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| | Mighty Baby Live In The Attic CD (2009)
Jungle Fever album
$15.15 Mighty Baby's music wasn't extremely similar to the Grateful Dead's, but there are similarities in how their music is presented and received, albeit on a much, much smaller scale than the Dead's. Much of Mighty Baby's material was based around loose, semi-improvisational grooves combining numerous styles; their cult of fans, though far less numerous than the Dead's, exhibits similar ardor for their heroes; and that passion simply doesn't translate to many outside of the cult, who are a bit puzzled as to what the fuss is all about. All of the above applies to this extensive (63-minute) CD of previously unreleased material, recorded in 1970 between their two official LP releases. The first three tracks, in decent fidelity, are taken from a live gig in support of Love in March 1970, highlighted by the nearly 15-minute instrumental "Now You See It," which fuses their love for John Coltrane's Indian-influenced jazz with more rock-oriented instrumentation and rhythm. In contrast, the two other songs from that concert, "Stone Unhenged" (another instrumental) and "Sweet Mandarin" (which, like all of the songs on this disc, were not included on their pair of official LPs) are run-of-the-mill country-blues-rock -- the kind of thing you could imagine an obscure local support band to the Grateful Dead playing in 1970, for instance. The remainder of the CD was cut in the studio soon after the March 1970 concert, and is devoted mostly to the four-part, 40-minute improvised instrumental "Now You Don't." This again draws from both the exotic jazz of Coltrane's final years and the more straightforward power of psychedelic rock, and fairly impressively, rather in the way -- as much as some Mighty Baby fans might find the comparison odd or inappropriate -- Soft Machine did on their early-'70s jazz-rock recordings. Closing the set is another cut from those studio sessions, the brief and seemingly ...
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