| | Pastor Troy Love Me Hate Me CD Pastor Troy Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Pastor Troy Love Me Hate Me Songs | 1. | Pastor Troy |
| 2. | Smoking Good - (remix) |
| 3. | War |
| 4. | What the Deal Boo |
| 5. | Ride It Out [Remix] - (remix) |
| 6. | Blessin', The |
| 7. | Land Shark |
| 8. | Represent That Hoe |
| 9. | Blue Flame |
| 10. | Keep Talking |
| 11. | Legendary |
| 12. | PT Cruiser |
| 13. | True To It |
| Love Me Hate Me Music Review Purchase Love Me Hate Me CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Pastor Troy Tool Muziq CD (2007)
Love Me Hate Me
$13.65
| | Pastor Troy T.R.O.Y. CD (2008)
Love Me Hate Me
$13.69
| | Pastor Troy Feel Me Or Kill Me CD (2009)
Love Me Hate Me
$12.79
| | Pastor Troy Ready For War CD (2009)
Love Me Hate Me
$15.19
| | Silky Soul Music: An All-Star Tribute To Maze Featuring Frankie Beverly CD (2009)
Love Me Hate Me
$11.65 A San Francisco-based ...
| | Michael Jackson - Video Greatest Hits - History V. 2: On Film DVD (1997)
Love Me Hate Me
$9.69
| | Various Artists Wondrous India CD (2002)
Love Me Hate Me
$5.35 Wondrous India is an album of what would primarily be classified as Indian folk music, though elements of the classical realm run rampant. The opening track is a semi-classical dance, performed (aurally) in a stop-and-go fashion with a slight vocal introduction followed by sections of light percussion, heavy percussion, the occasional sitar, and flutes in various combinations with clear demarcations between the movements. ...
| | Conjunto Primavera Dejando Huella, Vol. 2 CD (2005) With DVD
Love Me Hate Me
$14.35
| | Artist Of The Year Velour Brigade CD (2008) (Import)
Love Me Hate Me
$28.89
| | Gesellschaft Zur Emanzipation D Circulations CD (2009)
Love Me Hate Me
$16.39 Liner Note Author: Jan Jelinek.
| | Karaoke: Michael Buble CD (2009)
$11.29 | | Parliament Osmium CD (1970)
Love Me Hate Me
$11.65 The first Parliament album, OSMIUM, was a mixed-up mess of an affair, but would anyone expect anything less? The overall sound is much more Funkadelic than later Parliament, if with a somewhat more accessible feel. Things get going with an appropriately leering start, thanks to "I Call My Baby Pussycat," which makes something like "What's New, Pussycat?" seem like innocent, chaste conversation. After a stripped-down start, things explode into a full-on funk strut with heavy-duty guitar and slamming drums setting the way. The singers sound like they're tripping without losing the soul-sudden music dropouts, vocal cut-ins, volume level tweaks, and more add to the off-kilter feeling. OSMIUM's sound progresses from there--it's funk's fire combined with a studio freedom that feels like a blueprint for the future. Bernie Worrell's keyboard abilities are already clear, whether he's trying for hotel lounge jams or full freakiness; similarly, Eddie Hazel is clearly finding his own epic stoned zone to peel out some amazing solos at the drop of a hat. As for the subject matter and end results--who else but this crew could have come up with the trash-talking, yodeling twang of "Little Ole Country Boy" in 1970 and still made it funky with all the steel guitar? Other fun times include the piano and vocal-into-full-band goofy romantic romp of "My Automobile" and "Funky Woman," where over a heavy groove (and goofy Worrell break) the titular character lives with the consequence of her stank: "She hung them in the air/The air said this ain't fair!" Amidst all the nuttiness, there are some perhaps surprising depths--consider "Oh Lord, Why Lord/Prayer," which might almost be too pretty for its own good (Worrell's harpsichord almost verges on the sickly sweet) but still has some lovely gospel choir singing and heartfelt lyrics.
The first Parliament album as such was a mixed-up mess of an affair -- but would anyone expect anything less? The overall sound is much more Funkadelic than later Parliament, if with a somewhat more accessible feel. Things get going with an appropriately leering start, thanks to "I Call My Baby Pussycat," which makes something like "What's New, Pussycat?" seem like innocent, chaste conversation. After a stripped-down start, things explode into a full-on funk strut with heavy-duty guitar and slamming drums setting the way, while the singers sound like they're tripping without losing the soul -- sudden music dropouts, vocal cut-ins, volume level tweaks, and more add to the off-kilter feeling. Osmium's sound progresses from there -- it's funk's fire combined with a studio freedom that feels like a blueprint for the future. Bernie Worrell's keyboard abilities are already clear, whether he's trying for hotel lounge jams or full freakiness; similarly, Eddie Hazel is clearly finding his own epic stoned zone to peel out some amazing solos at the drop of a hat. As for the subject matter and end results -- who else but this crew could have come up with the trash-talking, yodeling twang of "Little Ole Country Boy" in 1970 and still made it funky with all the steel guitar? Other fun times include the piano and vocal-into-full-band goofy romantic romp of "My Automobile" and "Funky Woman," where over a heavy groove (and goofy ...
| | Jackson 5 Going Back To Indiana/Looking Through CD (2009) (Import) Import
Love Me Hate Me
$49.89
| | Mitch Benn Where Next? CD (2009) (Import)
Love Me Hate Me
$22.59
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