| | Dark Tranquillity Projector CD - Import Dark Tranquillity Discography of CDs
Dark Tranquillity Projector Songs | 1. | FreeCard | $0.99 | |
| 2. | ThereIn | $0.99 | |
| 3. | UnDo Control | $0.99 | |
| 4. | Auctioned | $0.99 | |
| 5. | To A Bitter Halt | $0.99 | |
| 6. | The Sun Fired Blanks | |
| 7. | Nether Novas | $0.99 | |
| 8. | Day To End | $0.99 | |
| 9. | Dobermann | $0.99 | |
| 10. | On Your Time | $0.99 | |
| Projector Review
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Purchase Projector CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Transatlantic The Whirlwind CDs (2009)
Projector album
$18.79
| | Halford III: Winter Songs CD (2009) Special Edition; Digipak
Projector CD music
$13.75 At first glance, Halford's entry into the crowded holiday market looks like a parody. Heavy metal and Christmas make for strange bedfellows, and WINTER SONGS' pastoral cover art -- which depicts Rob Halford staring wistfully (with a goatee and shades) into a soft, snowy pine forest -- screams Spinal Tap. That said, the Judas Priest frontman approaches yuletide standards like "We Three Kings" and "What Child Is This?" with the same conviction that he applied to Priest classics like "Electric Eye" and "Freewheel Burning" -- it probably helps that most traditional ...
| | Metallica - Live SH.T: Binge & Purge DVDs (1993)
Projector music CDs
$41.89 Rock is all about excess, and this Metallica boxed set embodies that principle. For die-hard fans of the metal band (or those soon to be converts), this mammoth collection features more than eight hours of concert footage. The three audio CDs span five days' worth of shows in Mexico City in 1993. Fans can watch a pair of classic shows from 1989 and 1992 on the two volumes of concert footage. The second volume also features a 72-page book in its entirety that can be viewed via TV or computer.
This version is in DVD packaging. This massive 8 hour package contains 3 CD's & 2 DVD's. CD material ...
| | Kid Rock Devil Without A Cause CD (1998)
Projector songs
$10.75 In the grand tradition of Faith No More, Red Hot Chili Peppers, etc. genre-hopper Kid Rock chooses to lay down his raps over a bed of rock-oriented electric guitar riffs instead of traditional hip-hop tracks and beats. Unlike the aforementioned groups though, Kid Rock comes off more like an adventurous hip-hopper than a rocker with a Public Enemy jones. In an effort to prove himself as "street" as his more conventional rap ...
| | Dream Theater Train Of Thought CD (2003)
Projector album
$11.05 TRAIN OF THOUGHT continues the legacy of the progressive metal legends, with all the requisite superhuman metallic musicianship that their fans have come to expect. This outing continues in the heavier mode that began with 2002's SIX DEGREES OF INNER TURBULENCE, reaching even further into darker, personal lyrical themes.
Guitars are the dominant expressive voice here, with keyboards scaled considerably back from the signature Dream Theater sound. Band members Mike Portnoy (drums) and John Petrucci (guitar) continue their do-it-yourself production approach, opting for recording venues on their native Long Island (much of the band's album work has taken place in upstate New York at Bear Tracks and Little Bear Studios). "As I Am" and "This Dying Soul" at times borrow generously from Metallica, featuring that band's well-known use of tri-tones, and vocalist James LaBrie even tries his hat at some Hetfield-isms. Possibly due to Petrucci's tenure on the G3 Tour (with Joe Satriani and Steve Vai), TRAIN finds him returning to Dream Theater wielding an even more lethal guitar soloing style. Of all the new tracks, the instrumental "Stream of Consciousness" sounds in closest proximity to the band's earlier material, and, for longtime fans, this bodes well for their future efforts.
2003 progressive metal masterpiece ...
| | Savatage Hall Of The Mountain King CD (1987)
Projector CD music
$8.39 With band members, critics, and fans unhappy with the commercialism of Fight for the Rock, Savatage began to disintegrate. However the new found acquaintance of producer Paul O'Neill not only changed the group's fortunes but soon pointed them in new directions. O'Neill, who was looking for a metal band to record some of his musical ideas, agreed to produce the group's next album, which became Hall of the Mountain King. A return to the form of Dungeons Are Calling, Hall of the Mountain King was the great album the band had always threatened to make. Featuring blistering guitar riffs, numerous tempo changes, and over-the-top screeching vocals, Savatage were finally captured by decent production after two albums of attempts to put a pop sheen on their music. Returning mostly to dark fantasy subject matter, "Devastation," "Legions," and the epic title track sounded more confident and tighter than anything on their previous two records, featuring dynamic rhythms courtesy of bassist Middleton and drummer Wacholz. The catchy pop-metal of "Strange Wings" was ironically a better song than any of the band's more blatant attempts at commercialism. Meanwhile, ...
| | King's X Go Tell Somebody CD (2008) (Import)
$44.69 |
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