| | Apsci Best Crisis Ever CD Apsci Discography of CDs
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Apsci Best Crisis Ever Songs Best Crisis Ever Review
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Purchase Best Crisis Ever CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Z-Ro Cocaine CD (2009)
Best Crisis Ever
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Best Crisis Ever
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| | ABBA Gold: Greatest Hits CD (1993)
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| | James Brown Live At The Garden CDs (1967)
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| | Best Of Sam Cooke CD (1962) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
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| | Jay-El Dance Close/Reverse CD (2005)
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| | Sister Sledge We Are Family CD (1979)
Best Crisis Ever
$6.09 Sister Sledge: Debbie Sledge, Joni Sledge, Kim Sledge, Kathy Sledge (vocals). Additional personnel: Mark Ralph (guitar); Marianne Carroll, Cheryl Hong, Karen Milne (strings); Alex Foster (saxophone, flute); Jean Fineberg (saxophone); Ellen Seeling (trumpet); Barry Rogers (trombone); Robert Sabino (piano, Clavinet); Andy Schwartz (piano); Raymond Jones (Fender Rhodes electric piano); Sammy Figueroa (percussion); Alfa Anderson, Diva Gray, David Lasley, Norma Jean Wright (background vocals). Producers: Bernard Edwards, Nile Rodgers. Reissue producers: David McLees, Patrick Milligan. Engineers: Bob Clearmountain, Don Berman, Bert Szerlip. Recorded at The Power Station Studios, New York. Includes liner notes by Ken Barnes. Personnel: Nile Rodgers (guitar); Cheryl Hong, Marianne Carroll, Karen Milne (strings); Alex Foster (flute, saxophone); Jeanie Fineberg (saxophone); Ellen Seeling, Jon Faddis (trumpet); Barry Rogers (trombone); Robert Sabino (piano, Clavinet); Andy Schwartz (piano); Sammy Figueroa, Tony Thompson (drums); David Lasley, Diva Gray, Luther Vandross, Alfa Anderson, Norma Jean Wright (background vocals). Audio Remasterer: Bill Inglot. Liner Note Author: Ken Barnes. Recording information: Power Station Studios, New York, NY. Photographer: Jim Houghton. Arranger: Nile Rodgers. WE ARE FAMILY is the canonical Sister Sledge album, containing both of the group's biggest songs; their first hit, "He's the Greatest Dancer"; and their signature anthem,"We Are Family." Produced by Chic's Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards, WE ARE FAMILY is a landmark of the late disco sound. This inexpensive budget line reissue on the Rhino Flashback label contains the full 1979 album plus four bonus tracks: two remixes each of "We Are Family" and the album's third single, ...
| | Tigre Apt Taft CD (2009)
Best Crisis Ever
$11.39 Tigre is a Singer Songwriter that resides in beautiful Los Angeles, CA. She was raised in Nigeria but moved to Los Angeles for music.She has worked on various projects with talented musicians in the Los Angeles Area. She also performs with the Circus, Cirque Berzerk. 2003/2004, she decided to attend the Musician’s Institute in Hollywood to learn to play the guitar. The experience was a life-changing year that launched ...
| | Beyonce I Am...Sasha Fierce CD (2008) Bonus Track; Deluxe Edition
Best Crisis Ever
$9.58 I AM. SASHA FIERCE represents another change of pace for Beyoncé. Unlike the relatively streamlined, retro-soul inflected B'DAY, I AM... is a sprawling two-disc set designed to reflect two conflicting sides of Beyoncé's musical personality. The first disc sports reflective, sometimes moody ballads, while the second, attributed to Beyoncé's brash alter ego, Sasha Fierce, is loaded with propulsive dance-floor fillers. Except for this stylistic divide, I AM. pays only nominal attention to its supposed concept, focusing instead on a set of excellent, radio-ready songs--neatly avoiding the possibility of I AM. becoming some sort of Chris Gaines-style conceptual disaster. Though the second disc, which boasts the synth-drenched lead single, "Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)," is more immediately gratifying, the impeccably produced ballads of the first disc represent a vast improvement on the often awkward torch songs that weighed down Beyoncé's first solo record. In non-Deluxe Edition form, Beyoncé's third solo studio album is as concise as 2006's B'day, but it is divided into two discs as a way to emphasize the singer's distinct personalities. It's a gimmick, of course -- a flimsy one. Revealed through interviews in 2005, Sasha was said to be Beyoncé's "stage persona," an embodiment of the outgoing, aggressive, on-stage Beyoncé that doesn't necessarily represent the real Beyoncé. Sasha now has a last name (possibly picked up from Tyra Banks, who maybe took a cue from Klymaxx), and is granted half an album (the second disc) to express herself. These five songs, when compared to ...
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