| | Elegy Manifestation Of Fear CD Elegy Discography of CDs
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Elegy: Ian Parry (vocals); Henk Van Der Laars (guitar); Chris Allister (keyboards); Martin Helmantel (bass); Dirk Bruineberg (drums). Manifestation Of Fear Music Elegy Manifestation Of Fear Songs Manifestation Of Fear Music Manifestation Of Fear Music Review Purchase Manifestation Of Fear CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Elegy State Of Mind CD (1998)
Manifestation Of Fear album
$10.59
| | Stratovarius Visions CD (1997)
Manifestation Of Fear CD music
$10.45
| | Elegy Forbidden Fruit CD (2000)
Manifestation Of Fear music CDs
$9.95
| | Kamelot Eternity CD (1995)
Manifestation Of Fear songs
$10.59
| | Kamelot Karma CD (2001)
Manifestation Of Fear album
$10.45 Opening with the track "Regalis Aperture," an instrumental piece that sounds like it could have been lifted from the Chariots of Fire soundtrack, Kamelot's Karma promises to deliver ambitiously orchestral prog-metal from the very start. A scan of the song titles ("Wings ...
| | Mark Elf Swingin' CD (2001)
Manifestation Of Fear CD music
$14.69 This inventive electric jazz guitarist has had the great fortune to release eight CDs on his own label, without any need to concern himself with corporate dictation or airplay necessities -- and, in so doing, has been a huge hit on the Gavin radio charts. Freedom is what jazz is all about, and Elf's trio (which includes bassist Robert Hurst and drummer Winard Harper) epitomizes this on an album that generously lives up to its title. As always, Elf has a good time mixing playful originals (like the snappy, seductive "Indubitably," which gives Harper ample percussion solo time) and reworkings of classics by legends like Jerome Kern, John Coltrane, ...
| | Waila of the Tohono O'Odham CD (1994)
Manifestation Of Fear music CDs
$13.69
| | Paradise Lost Symbol Of Life CD (2002)
Manifestation Of Fear songs
$9.99 Though the relative merits of Paradise Lost's bizarre transformation from heavier-than-God doom/death metal originators to an alternative rock act delving into gothic electronica remain locked in a fierce debate, there's no sense ignoring two unmistakable facts. First, the band had clearly reached the end of its original direction's tether with 1995's Draconian Times, which, despite its success with fans and solid songs, was little more than a retread of the band's previous album, and arguably career-apex, Icon. Second, while their subsequent sonic experiments have often resembled nothing more than a slightly heavier version of Depeche Mode (complete with singer Nick Holmes adopting a very David Gahan-esque, deadened baritone), the band has proved remarkably resilient in pursuing and defending their chosen career course, of which 2002's Symbol of Life is amazingly the fourth installment. And like the first, 1997's transitional One Second, Symbol of Life may prove the most palatable to the band's disapproving hardcore metal fan contingent. Album highlights such as "Erased," "Perfect Mask," and first single "Mistify" present very adventurous and mostly satisfying contrasts between the very heavy, minor-chord guitar riffs of old and the newfangled electronic elements of recent years. Conversely, songs treading the dreaded middle ground ("Pray Nightfall," "Self-Obsessed") are as irritatingly average and revealing of the group's pop limitations as ever, the tribal drumming heard on the title track proving especially painful. Yet, for the aforementioned ...
| | Jorn Out To Every Nation CD (2004) (Import) Argentina
Manifestation Of Fear album
$18.39 This 2004 solo outing is a bold collection of tracks by the prolific Norwegian metal vocalist Jorn Lande.
The Nirvana/Pearl Jam/grunge/Seattle upheaval of the early '90s didn't eradicate '70s/'80s-style metal and hard rock, but it did marginalize them -- and from 1992-1993 on, rockers who weren't alternative in some fashion were considered dated or old school. But the more things change in music, the more they inevitably stay the same -- which is why the '90s and early 2000s gave listeners a wave of young European power metal revival bands that refuse to live in a post-Nevermind world and stubbornly cling to the metal of the '70s and '80s. Out to Every Nation, Norwegian singer Jorn Lande's third solo album, isn't power metal per se -- at least not in the basic Judas Priest/Iron Maiden/Queensr˙che/Savatage sense. But this 2004 release does have a strong '70s/'80s vibe and is proudly retro in a way that will appeal to all the Gen-X and Gen-Y headbangers who find themselves craving the same classic rock stations that their baby boomer parents or grandparents listen to. Lande, who has no problem singing in perfect English, is clearly a Deep Purple worshiper; David Coverdale, in fact, has greatly influenced his vocals, which also owe ...
| | Children Of Bodom Trashed, Lost & Strung Out CD (2005) Extended Play; Enhanced CD
Manifestation Of Fear CD music
$6.25 Enhancements include a music video and "behind-the-scenes" footage.
Clearly not wishing to lose the considerable head of steam accumulated by their ever-more popular albums, Finnish extreme metal favorites Children of Bodom unleashed this four-track EP in 2005 -- just in case their fans ...
| | MF Doom Mm..Food CD (2004)
Manifestation Of Fear music CDs
$14.25
| | Bad Seeds Live At The Royal Albert Hall CD (2008) (Import)
$19.89 |
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