| | Patrick Moraz In Tokyo CD Patrick Moraz Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $15.39 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
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Personnel: Patrick Moraz (piano, keyboards); Bill Bruford (drums). Patrick Moraz In Tokyo Songs In Tokyo Review
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Purchase In Tokyo CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Flora Purim That's What She Said CD (1977)
In Tokyo album
$9.89 Digitally remastered by Joe Tarantino (2001 Fantasy Studios).
Toward the close of her Milestone years, Flora Purim teamed up with producer/keyboardist George Duke ...
| | Jonas Hellborg Octave Of The Holy Innocents CD (1995)
In Tokyo CD music
$13.79 Those familiar with the respective ...
| | Ginger Baker's Airforce CD (1970)
In Tokyo music CDs
$13.45 Reissue of the acclaimed drummer's 1970 post Cream project, recorded live at the Royal Albert Hall. He is joined by many special guests here including, Steve Winwood, Rick Grech, Chris Wood, Denny Laine, Graham Bond & more.
For a change, the late 1960s yielded up a supergroup that lived up to its hype and then some. Ginger Baker's Air Force was recorded ...
| | Chris Squire Fish Out Of Water CD (1975) Deluxe Expanded Edition with DVD
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| | Miles Davis Kind Of Blue CDs (1959) 50th Anniversary Collector's Edition
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$88.15 The most well known, beloved, and bestselling jazz album of all ...
| | Genesis: 1970-1975 CDs (2008) With DVD; Box Set
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| | This Is Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra Vol. 1 CD (2001)
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| | Melissa Ferrick 70 People At 7000 Feet CD (2003)
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| | Runaway Totem Tep Zepi CD (2006) (Import)
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| | Kerri Simpson Maybe By Midnight CD (2007) (Import)
In Tokyo CD music
$13.99 Review by Graham BlackleyIn this sad, dark age of divisive hatred, nonsensical nationalism and narrow minded stupidity, it is more than refreshing to stumble across the passionately open-minded cross-cultural explorations of Melbourne's adventurous and talented Kerri Simpson. "Vodou: Songs ...
| | Frank Turner Poetry Of The Deed CD (2009) Digipak
In Tokyo music CDs
$11.99 London-based singer and songwriter Frank Turner has been on quite a journey since he was a member of the pol-punk heroes Million Dead -- it's been as a solo troubadour that Turner has established his reputation in the U.K. His records have gone from the stripped-down acoustic, Billy Bragg-inspired Campfire Punkrock EP in 2006 to the very electric Love Ire & Song in 2008. His brand of poetic indie punk-pop proved an underground -- and later aboveground -- smash in the United Kingdom. Poetry of the Deed is not appreciably different sonically than its predecessor, Love Ire & Song -- and that's a very good thing. Produced by Alex Newport, this set is polished, immediate, and crackles with energy. Part of that is because of the live recording setting. All the instruments were played live, with few overdubs except for the vocals. The new touches are ace: the piano interludes and solos in the middle eights and bridges, the weave of acoustic and electric guitars, the subtle backing vocals, and the beautiful placement of the rhythm section in the mix as a swirling undercurrent guiding each chord change and chorus. The set opener, "Live Fast Die Old," is a classic kind of modern pop-punk anthem. The lyrics are a manifesto of redemption and a confession of youthful mistakes. The verse in the song contains the words "...I'm tired of being damned, I'd rather be saved/And we can never sell out because we never bought in...." "Try This at Home" is a blazing, hooky D.I.Y. number that celebrates the homemade nature of punk rock, encouraging folks at home to pick up guitars, pens, and paper and ultimately laying out this truth to the masses: "There's no such thing as rock stars, they're just people who play music/And some of them are just like us, and some of them are dicks." Hilarious and true.
The title tracks is built on one of those terrific rock hooks you can't get out of your head after you've heard it once. Turner's voice is on the same level as the instrumental din, and the banging one-chord piano riff sounds like something off a Mott the Hoople record from the '70s. There's softer material here as well: Turner hasn't forgotten his acoustic roots at all; he's just learned to weave them through his love of rock & roll. "Dan's Song" is a tough yet tender tribute to a friend; the political-folkish "Richard Divine" contains an electric guitar riff at the forefront, but the fuel comes from the ...
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