| | Very Best Of Ben E King CD Ben E King Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Very Best Of Ben E King Music Very Best Of Ben E King Music Review Buy Very Best Of Ben E King CD Purchase Very Best Of Ben E King CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Vanity Fare Sun, The Wind And Other Things CD (1968)
Very Best Of Ben E King album
$10.69
| | When In Rome CD (1988)
Very Best Of Ben E King CD music
$9.25 When in Rome was another in a long line of British pop acts scoring one major hit single before seemingly disappearing without a trace. The 1988 hit "The Promise" was essentially a carbon copy of New Order's radio-friendly dance-rock. Dark yet catchy, boasting a throbbing dance rhythm, a singalong chorus, and a hypnotic melody, "The Promise" certainly deserved the success. Like many one-hit wonders of the '80s, When in Rome failed to maintain the momentum set by its only hit song by releasing a dud of an album. "The Promise," the opening track on When in Rome, starts things off nicely, but the remainder of the album is embarrassingly weak. Vocalists Clive Farrington and Andrew Mann sound just fine solo (as demonstrated on "The Promise"), but their attempts to harmonize on such tunes as "Heaven Knows" ...
| | Starz Anthology CD (2000)
Very Best Of Ben E King music CDs
$13.15 To some, Starz were Kiss' "little brother band," due to the fact that--like the masked quartet--Starz debuted in the 1970s, were managed by Bill Aucoin, hailed from the East Coast, and specialized in hook-heavy arena rock. And to ...
| | Rick Astley Greatest Hits CD (2002)
Very Best Of Ben E King songs
$8.99 Recorded between 1987 and 1993. Includes liner notes by Bill Pitzonka.
The folks at BMG Heritage did a wonderful job assembling Rick Astley's long-overdue Greatest Hits, for it succeeds in presenting a definitive and complete collection of the 1980s pop sensation's U.S. and U.K. hits. Not only does this set include all of his singles, it also boasts excellent liner notes, photographs, and chart positions. Included are his American chart-toppers "Together Forever" and "Never Gonna Give You Up," the latter arguably one of the 1980s' most recognizable songs, as well as all of his other Top Ten hits, including the Motown-ish "It Would Take a Strong, Strong Man," "She Wants to Dance With Me," and the 1991 ballad hit "Cry for Help." All of Astley's U.K. hits are accounted for, including "When I Fall in Love" and its non-album ...
| | In America DVD (2003) Pan & Scan; Widescreen; Dubbed; Subtitled
Very Best Of Ben E King album
$9.69
| | Bert Jansch Essential CD (2009)
Very Best Of Ben E King CD music
$11.65
| | Doug Kershaw Easy CD (2002)
Very Best Of Ben E King music CDs
$10.99
| | Fred Argir November, It's Good To See You Again CD (2009)
Very Best Of Ben E King songs
$16.45
| | Lj Echols Another Level CD (2009)
Very Best Of Ben E King album
$16.45
| | Duane Brandenburg Christmas Eve, I Cried CD (2009)
Very Best Of Ben E King CD music
$16.45
| | Quintus Mccormick Hey Jodie CD (2009)
Very Best Of Ben E King music CDs
$13.09 Delmark Records consistently unearths blues talent heretofore undiscovered, and guitarist/vocalist Quintus McCormick certainly fills that bill. Born in Detroit in 1957, he was listening primarily to rock & roll, but upon a move to Chicago in the late '70s, it took yet another decade for him to discover his calling as a bluesman. This recording shows McCormick has emerged from the shadows of being a sideman (James Cotton, Lefty Dizz, A.C. Reed), leading a band with a horn section and backup singers to present his side of authentic urban music. His acknowledged influence of guitarist Albert King is quite evident in his solos and fills, while vocally he's quite reminiscent of Bobby "Blue" Bland, or former employer/mentor Otis Clay. These songs were written by McCormick, with the stamp of authentic 12-bar blues, a little contemporary soul, and some rocking beats at times. The basic style of tunes like "Get You Some Business," the shuffle "I'm Alright Now," and the lone cover "Let the Good Times Roll" shows McCormick has studied populist blues that appeal to a wider audience. He's also heard his share of Sam Cooke, as reflected in the more soulful "Hot Lovin' Woman," while Clay's Southern-type crossover sound is evident during the slow title track and the swinging, swaying "I'm a Good Man Baby." His chops on guitar, so similar to Albert King that a blindfold test might not reveal the truth, hits home during the appropriately titled "What Goes Around Comes Around," while the rockin', good-time "I Wasn't Thinkin'" also gets down to the core of how the blues should uplift you past any mistake or error of judgment. "Fifty/Fifty" is the most interesting cut, a simmering ...
| | 3RD Eye Brother CD (2009)
For Sale Pre-Order Now! Available: Tuesday, January 05, 2010
$15.98 |
|
|
|
 |
|

|