| | Maximum Aaliyah CD Aaliyah Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
Live Recording Maximum Aaliyah Songs | 1. | Intro/A Flame Still Burns |
| 2. | Born to Sing |
| 3. | High School Hop |
| 4. | Plucked Like a Rose |
| 5. | Different Beat, A |
| 6. | Broken In |
| 7. | Movie Queen |
| 8. | Work If Out |
| 9. | Dark Side, The |
| 10. | Eclipse of the Sun, An |
| 11. | Never Forgotten |
| Maximum Aaliyah Music Review Average Rating: (4.3 out of 5 stars)   Aaliyah Aaliyah, she is preety too just like Ashanti i like em both. Submitted by AdenCrater4Life (USA,MI) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Aaliyah 4 Life. I am really proud of what Aaliyah did,
but she is no more in the world. Submitted by AbeerKhan115 (Melvindale, MI, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
She will Be missed...She is Missed this brings me back to remember all the great things she done in her life and how shw touch every one i love it Submitted by elonyce (Anniston) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Maximum Aaliyah CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Eminem Relapse CD (2009)
Maximum Aaliyah
$10.85 Audio Mixers: Dr. Dre; Eminem. Lyrical acrobat Slim Shady returns after a five-year absence with his fifth major label release, continuing to strike the perfect balance between brooding insight and absolute silliness on 2009's RELAPSE. Opening single "Crack a Bottle" reunites Detroit's maddest rapper with his superstar mentor (Dr. Dre) and protege (50 Cent) on a fittingly funky tour de force. Eminem's RELAPSE, a double album released after five years of recorded silence, a record featuring Dr. Dre behind the boards for the first time since 2000, faced no shortage of the relentless pressure of expectations. A narrative of survival after facing down his demons in rehab unfurled with Eminem's usual twisted Swift-ian wit, RELAPSE should disappoint few fans (or critics for that matter) with its patented mix of hilariously spit venom and delirious self-loathing. Like Darren Aronofsky's adaptation of REQUIEM FOR A DREAM, 2009's RELAPSE finds the full horror element in drug addiction. Eminem's raps, for all their over-the-top humor, have always conjured up images fit for Fangoria, but as he comes out of rehab, seeking solace from his demons, Mr. Mathers amps up the gore on RELAPSE. Dre's beats lurk dark-thumping sinister while Em unleashes nightmare dreamscapes of murder, mayhem, ...
| | Brian Mcknight Evolution Of A Man CD (2009)
Maximum Aaliyah
$13.24 Photographer: Christian Lantry. Brian McKnight's lone set of non-Christmas material for Warner Bros., 2006's TEN, peaked exactly where his previous six proper albums topped out (within the Top Five of Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop chart), yet he finds himself on E1 (formerly Koch) for EVOLUTION OF A MAN. Though he has written and produced plenty of his own material in the past, he did it all on this one, and presumably provided much of its instrumentation. It's a set ...
| | Luther Vandross - Live At Wembley DVD (1989)
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$9.69
| | Michael Jackson: Dangerous - The Short Films DVD (1993) Subtitled
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$9.69
| | Jeffrey Osborne: Bet On Jazz DVD (2000)
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$8.45
| | Barry White Unlimited CDs (2009) With Book; With DVD; Box Set; Special Edition
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$63.98 Tributee: Barry White. Liner Note Authors: Ed Greene; Quincy Jones; Barry White. Photographer: Bobby Holland. UNLIMITED is more substantial than it appears. Looking like a five-dollar box of chocolates, with its contents printed on a large black sticker slapped onto the back, it improves upon 1992's JUST FOR YOU box in breadth and (once you open the thing) presentation. The only potential problem for some listeners is that 20 of the songs appear in "alternate versions" -- a gentle way of saying "2009 remixes." The mixes were done by Jack Perry, Barry White's musical director and engineer, and they do retain the integrity of the originals. One would have to be fairly familiar with the material to discern major differences. (Did the songs need to be remixed, though? No.) UNLIMITED, like most boxes, does not cater specifically to casual fans or collectors. Discs One and Two cover the Barry White albums, from 1973's I'VE GOT SO MUCH TO GIVE through 1999's STAYING POWER. Disc Three is devoted to the Love Unlimited Orchestra and female trio Love Unlimited, the groups he directed and nurtured, while the fourth disc compiles other production work for the mostly obscure likes of Gloria Scott, Jay Dee, White Heat, Black Satin, and Jimmie & Vella Cameron (whose "Be Fair to Me," released in ...
| | Marilyn Crispell Santuerio CD (1993) Reissued
Maximum Aaliyah
$14.39 For this recording, pianist Marilyn Crispell both debuted a new quartet and embarked on a somewhat different path from her previous outings and, certainly, from her long tenure with Anthony Braxton. Pulling in violinist Mark Feldman and cellist Hank Roberts (along with longtime compadre Gerry Hemingway), her music, here essentially an eight-part suite, took on a more elegiac, overtly spiritual tone. The pieces are draped around the loosest of thematic materials, the musicians instead using the wisps of ideas to gently launch into introspective investigations, occasionally coalescing into brief, more frenzied bouts, but generally remaining in a pensive state. The title track begins with a long, intricate percussion solo from Hemingway ...
| | Robb Wilton's War CD (2001)
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$15.55
| | M Ward Transistor Radio CD (2005)
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$13.05 Personnel: Jenny Lewis (vocals); Old Joe Clarks (whistle, bass instrument, percussion); Jordan Hudson (drums); Jim James (vocals, guitar); Vic Chesnutt (vocals); Howe Gelb (piano); John Parish, Rachel Blumberg (drums). Audio Mixers: Adam Selzer ; Larry Crane . Recording information: Jackpot!; Mike Coyendall's Attic, Portland, Jamaica; Type Fondry!; Wavelab!. Photographer: Zak Riles. Listening to M. Ward's breezy ode to radio's forgotten heydays is a lot like taking in a huge breath of dust-bowl wind -- however, its charms are rooted in the hazy lemonade-sipping of summer rather than the great depression-obsession of the post-O Brother, Where Art Thou? mainstream. Ward's voice is a slap-delayed pastiche of Ron Sexsmith's easygoing croon and Andrew Bird's closed-mouth drawl, and like his front-porch fingerpicking, it's as effortless as it is effective. Transistor Radio begins with a lovely instrumental version of the Pet Sounds classic "You Still Believe in Me," then drops the needle on "One Life Away," a lo-fi shout-out to the radio towers of old that centers around the sly and condemning lines "To all the people in the ground/Listening to the sound of the living people walking up and down the graves/Well one of them is mine/I'm visiting my fräulein/She's only one breath away." Many have used the "fake old 78" approach before, but in Ward's hands it sounds truly genuine, and his falsetto harmonizing is as spooky as the song is sweet. While the rest of Radio plays out like a sequel to 2003's excellent Transfiguration of Vincent, with standout cuts like "Sweethearts On Parade," "Hi-Fi," and "Paul's Song" echoing that record's marvelous title track ("Vincent O'Brien"), there's a subtle optimism at work here that was only hinted at on previous recordings, and by the time he wraps the whole thing ...
| | Pierangelo Bertoli Parole Di Rabbia/Pensieri D'Amore CD (2006) (Import) Box Set; Germany
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$31.55
| | Marilyn Monroe Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friend CD (2006) (Import)
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$6.59
| | Less Than Sacred Way Home CD (2008)
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$10.15
| | Andreas Kapsalis Trio CD (2009)
Maximum Aaliyah
$12.69 Andreas Kapsalis' acoustic guitar approach is unorthodox ...
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